Saturday, April 12, 2014

All the passwords you should change because of Heartbleed, in one handy graphic

All the passwords you should change because of Heartbleed, in one handy graphic
Image Credit: WallpaperStock

Connect with leaders from the companies in this story, in real life: Come to the fourth annual VentureBeat Mobile Summit April 14-15 in Sausalito, Calif. Request an invitation.


The Heartbleed security flaw was fixed in the newest version of OpenSSL, but you should still change your passwords on all of the sites affected by the bug.


If you’re still not sure which sites were affected, we have the perfect chart for you, created by the “digital forensic specialists” at LWG Consulting. Every site from Facebook and Google to Pinterest and Flickr was affected. Luckily, many financial institutions were not.


Click here for the full size graphic.


LWG_Heartbleed


As we wrote yesterday, “Heartbleed arose inside a version of open-source OpenSSL cryptographic software. Information sitting inside the memory of a server should be encrypted, but a little bit of data could be pulled out under an attack. The vulnerability affected widely used infrastructure from cloud providers like Heroku and Amazon Web Services as well as networking hardware from vendors like Cisco and Juniper.”


Most recently, a report emerged alleging that the U.S. National Security Agency had known about Heartbleed for more than two years, and even exploited it. The NSA later denied the allegations.


All the passwords you should change because of Heartbleed, in one handy graphic

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