|
Sony's customers
-- many of whom had given the company their information for sweepstakes draws
-- appeared to agree. Tim Rillahan, a 39-year-old computer instructor in Ohio, said he was extremely upset to find his email address and password posted online for "the whole world to see." "I have since been changing my passwords on every site that uses a login," he said in an email Friday. "Sony stored our passwords in plain text instead of encrypting the information. It shows little respect to us, their customers." He and others complained that they had yet to hear from the company about the breach, news of which is nearly a day old. John Bumgarner, the chief technology officer for the U.S. Cyber Consequences Unit
-- a research group devoted to monitoring Internet threats -- was emphatic when asked whether users' passwords could be left unencrypted. "Never, never, never," he said. "Passwords should always be hashed. Some kind of encryption should be used." Bumgarner, who's been critical of Sony's security in the past, said the company needed to take a hard look at how it safeguards its data. "It's time for Sony to press the reset button on their cybersecurity program before another incident occurs," he said. ___ Online: Sony Pictures' Twitter account:
http://twitter.com/sonypictures
[Associated
Press;
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redistributed.
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