01-20-2023
12:04 PM
- last edited on
01-21-2023
08:50 AM
by
kh-stanley1
Social Security Numbers Stolen in PayPal Cyberattack (msn.com)
Just curious...
any thoughts on if this will affect sellers and buyers here?
01-20-2023 12:08 PM - edited 01-20-2023 12:09 PM
Nope! Nada! Niet!
01-20-2023 12:10 PM
Only for the people whose SSN has been stolen.
01-20-2023 12:16 PM - edited 01-20-2023 12:16 PM
Without ticking the link, I'd say it might affect some PayPal users.
01-20-2023 12:21 PM
01-20-2023 12:22 PM - edited 01-20-2023 12:23 PM
And here is another one...seems like these are becoming more prevalent these days...
https://www.techzine.eu/news/security/99796/norton-lifelock-data-breach-affects-thousands-of-users/
01-20-2023 12:27 PM
@hartungcards wrote:Only for the people whose SSN has been stolen.
which would be possibly some buyers as well as sellers...not everyone is tech aware.
01-20-2023 12:31 PM - edited 01-20-2023 12:33 PM
this might explain why eBay doesn't show the Norton link on their website anymore?
01-20-2023 12:40 PM
Hi @kus1617
My thoughts ~~ My eBay, PayPal, and Amazon accounts were each hacked within a few weeks of each other a few years ago.
I had to change my passwords and have eBay Trust & Safety remove an item that the hacker had listed for sale on my account.
It was a negligible hassle ... and I don't waste my time worrying about it happening again. 99.9% (approximately) of what we humans worry about won't ever happen. 😊
01-20-2023 12:40 PM
If you actually read the article, PayPal was not hacked. What happened was that people reused their PayPal passwords on other websites, and THOSE websites were compromised. People simply took the email address and password combos that they'd gotten from other places and plugged them into a whole bunch of websites (including PayPal) to see if they worked.
This is why you should always use strong, UNIQUE passwords for each site.
01-20-2023 12:41 PM
Except for the big asteroid.
01-20-2023 12:52 PM
@kus1617 wrote:Social Security Numbers Stolen in PayPal Cyberattack (msn.com)
Just curious...
any thoughts on if this will affect sellers and buyers here?
Buyers, maybe. Sellers don't get to use PayPal for selling anyway.
The article says about 35,000 accounts were compromised, but that's out of a worldwide total of 209.3 million as of last year (Ref: https://www.oberlo.com/statistics/how-many-people-use-paypal), so I'm not particularly worried about mine. I also don't use the same password across multiple accounts, so anyone who does manage to get my password for one account will not be able to use it anywhere else.
01-20-2023 01:19 PM
@yuzuha wrote:If you actually read the article, PayPal was not hacked. What happened was that people reused their PayPal passwords on other websites, and THOSE websites were compromised. People simply took the email address and password combos that they'd gotten from other places and plugged them into a whole bunch of websites (including PayPal) to see if they worked.
This is why you should always use strong, UNIQUE passwords for each site.
People should be using a random password generator service. I use one offered by Google, which generates a random, complex password and stores it (or offers to store it, by the user's choice) in my Google account. The service also scans for breaches, weak passwords a user may have created, a list of duplicated passwords, etc.
The Chrome browser will also scan for breaches, weaknesses, duplicates, etc., for any saved passwords, but I don't believe it has its own password generator option.
It's a really bad idea to use the same password over and over again. If it's breached on one site, all sites are then vulnerable.
01-20-2023 01:24 PM
I would think using Facebook that has almost all your personal information....like people posting when they are going on a vacation and not at home stuff...I wouldn't worry too much about eBay.
01-20-2023 01:26 PM
In September of last year my administrator for health, pension, defined contribution/401knad other type benefit funds was compromised, so now those accounts are being monitored.
Never thought that would/could happen but it did/does.