If you use Zomato to look up restaurants, you may want to check your account: someone has infiltrated its system and got away with 17 million users’ IDs, usernames, names, email addresses and hashed passwords. The service says no payment information was stolen, since credit card details are stored separately. It also doesn’t have access to your Facebook or Google account, so you don’t have to worry about anything if you simply linked your account instead of making a standalone one for Zomato. But if you did make a standalone one for Zomato, it’s best to change your password ASAP. This is totally separate incident from the WannaCry attacks , and the hacker who infiltrated the company’s system didn’t ask for ransom. He tried to sell his loot on the dark web instead but ended up pulling it down when the company agreed to his terms. They include acknowledging the security vulnerabilities in its system, to work with the ethical hacker community to patch them up and to launch a bug bounty program. Zomato says it will amp up its website’s security measures, especially since it found out that 6.6 million of the stolen hashed passwords can “theoretically [be] decrypted using brute force algorithms.” It also promises to reveal how exactly the hacker got in, which the infiltrator himself revealed to the company, once it’s done fixing the vulnerabilities that made it possible. Via: VentureBeat Source: Zomato 
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Restaurant app Zomato hack leaves 17 million users exposed
ExtraTorrent, the world’s second largest torrent index, on Wednesday said it is permanently shutting its doors. The site, which launched in 2006, had steadily climbed the ranks in the piracy world to become the second most popular torrent site, observing millions of daily views. TorrentFreak adds: “ExtraTorrent with all mirrors goes offline.. We permanently erase all data. Stay away from fake ExtraTorrent websites and clones. Thx to all ET supporters and torrent community. ET was a place to beâ¦.” TorrentFreak reached out to ExtraTorrent operator SaM who confirmed that this is indeed the end of the road for the site. “It’s time we say goodbye, ” he said, without providing more details. ExtraTorrent is the latest in a series of BitTorrent giants to fall in recent months. Previously, sites including KickassTorrents, Torrentz.eu, TorrentHound and What.cd went offline. Read more of this story at Slashdot.