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North American Servers Battle.net Accounts Compromised


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#1 IMG News

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Posted 10 August 2012 - 06:35 AM

Blizzard Entertainment has announced that its internal network was recently breached, possibly compromising some global email addresses and the Battle.net accounts on North American servers. The company recommends users change their passwords, and will be offering further updates in the days to come.

Even when you are in the business of fun, not every week ends up being fun. This week, our security team found an unauthorized and illegal access into our internal network here at Blizzard. We quickly took steps to close off this access and began working with law enforcement and security experts to investigate what happened.

At this time, we’ve found no evidence that financial information such as credit cards, billing addresses, or real names were compromised. Our investigation is ongoing, but so far nothing suggests that these pieces of information have been accessed.

Some data was illegally accessed, including a list of email addresses for global Battle.net users, outside of China. For players on North American servers (which generally includes players from North America, Latin America, Australia, New Zealand, and Southeast Asia) the answer to the personal security question, and information relating to Mobile and Dial-In Authenticators were also accessed. Based on what we currently know, this information alone is NOT enough for anyone to gain access to Battle.net accounts.

We also know that cryptographically scrambled versions of Battle.net passwords (not actual passwords) for players on North American servers were taken. We use Secure Remote Password protocol (SRP) to protect these passwords, which is designed to make it extremely difficult to extract the actual password, and also means that each password would have to be deciphered individually. As a precaution, however, we recommend that players on North American servers change their password. Moreover, if you have used the same or similar passwords for other purposes, you may want to consider changing those passwords as well.

In the coming days, we'll be prompting players on North American servers to change their secret questions and answers through an automated process. Additionally, we'll prompt mobile authenticator users to update their authenticator software. As a reminder, phishing emails will ask you for password or login information. Blizzard Entertainment emails will never ask for your password. We deeply regret the inconvenience to all of you and understand you may have questions.
Learn more at the links below.
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#2 Thain Esh Kelch

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Posted 10 August 2012 - 06:38 AM

What a misleading and US centric title.. boooh
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#3 Frost

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Posted 10 August 2012 - 01:25 PM

On battle.net, there are two regions:

Korea, and everywhere else
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#4 UmarOMC1

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Posted 10 August 2012 - 11:17 PM

For players on North American servers (which generally includes players  from North America, Latin America, Australia, New Zealand, and Southeast  Asia) the answer to the personal security question, and information  relating to Mobile and Dial-In Authenticators were also accessed.

CHANGE YOUR PASSWORD. NOW.
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#5 cleansanchez

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Posted 11 August 2012 - 08:55 AM

Blizzard have always boasted about never having been breached. It is like waving an invitation to hackers for an ultimate challenge.

To be fair, Blizz were kind of forced to make this boast as many players were falsely claiming that they had been the victim of a hack, even though they had authenticators and unique passwords.

Players have always claimed that Blizz would never admit to a breach so I guess there is some (very) small positive to take out of this.

Damn I had such a cool password too.

Wonder if my authenticator(s) are now worthless? Don't really know how those things work.