Saturday, February 11, 2012

A potential website security embarrassment for Manwin

Monica Foster commentary: Well, if the following news item is accurate, I don't think it would be a smart move for Manwin to get into the porn industry talent testing arena (as reported by MikeSouth.com) - if Manwin can't manage to keep it's pornography website client data secure, they most certainly wouldn't be able to keep the porn talent's personal and medical data secure either (can we say PORNWIKILEAKS ?)

courtesy AdultFYI.com

Follow AdultFYI at twitter@adultfyi1; Follow Gene Ross at twitter@GeneRoss3

Looks like that hillbilly website got its "inside" info all wrong.

LONDON — A hacker claims to have compromised the personal information of more than 350,000 users after breaking into a disused website operated by pornography provider Brazzers.

Kate Miller, director of communications for site owner Manwin Holding SARL, said Saturday it was "currently investigating the issue" but that no credit card information has been leaked.

Miller said it appeared that the hacker had gained access to an inactive forum to help enter other, linked websites. She said she couldn't put a figure on the number of people potentially affected and declined to say whether customers were being warned of the breach, citing security reasons.

In an email, she said that security was "a priority at all times" and that the company would do all it could to safeguard its users' information. The email went on to blame the hacker for "illegal and prohibited cyber criminal activities."

The breach is a potential embarrassment for Luxembourg-based Manwin, which runs some of the world's best-known pornography websites.

A small sample of the hundreds of thousands of pieces of user data allegedly compromised were posted to the Internet earlier this week. Emails, usernames, and encrypted passwords were divulged, and in some cases it was possible to infer porn users' full names and country of origin.

The hacker claiming responsibility for the breach told The Associated Press that he carried out the attack to draw attention to the site's vulnerability.

"I didn't do that for any money," he said in an email.

He identified himself only as a 17-year-old living in Morocco and claimed allegiance to Anonymous, the global movement of cyber-mischief-makers who have carried out embarrassing attacks on record companies, the Church of Scientology, and the FBI.

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