this post was submitted on 03 Jan 2024
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Hope this isn't a repeated submission. Funny how they're trying to deflect blame after they tried to change the EULA post breach.

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[–] capital@lemmy.world 77 points 10 months ago (40 children)

The data breach started with hackers accessing only around 14,000 user accounts. The hackers broke into this first set of victims by brute-forcing accounts with passwords that were known to be associated with the targeted customers

Turns out, it is.

What should a website do when you present it with correct credentials?

[–] Thann@lemmy.ml 39 points 10 months ago (5 children)
  1. IP based rate limiting
  2. IP locked login tokens
  3. Email 2FA on login with new IP
[–] Umbraveil@lemmy.world 21 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

IP-based mitigation strategies are pretty useless for ATO and credential stuffing attacks.

These days, bot nets for hire are easy to come by and you can rotate your IP on every request limiting you controls to simply block known bad IPs and data server IPs.

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