LivingSocial Hacked, Cyber Attack Affects Millions Of Customers' Information

Major Daily Deal Site Hacked, Millions Of Customers Affected
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By Alistair Barr

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - LivingSocial, the second-largest daily deal company behind Groupon Inc, said on Friday it was hit by a cyber attack that may have affected more than 50 million customers.

The company said the attack on its computer systems resulted in unauthorized access to customer data, including names, email addresses, date of birth for some users and "encrypted" passwords.

LivingSocial stressed customer credit card and merchants' financial and banking information were not affected or accessed. It also does not store passwords in plain text.

"We are actively working with law enforcement to investigate this issue," the company, part-owned by Amazon.com Inc, wrote in an email to employees.

LivingSocial does not disclose how many customers it has. However, spokesman Andrew Weinstein said "a substantial portion" of the company's customer base was affected. LivingSocial is also contacting customers who closed accounts, because it still has their information stored in databases, he added.

The attack hit customers in the United States, Canada, the U.K., Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Southern Europe and Latin America. Customers in South Korea, Indonesia, Philippines and Thailand were not affected, Weinstein said.

"In light of recent successful widespread attacks against major social networking sites, it's obvious that these providers are simply not doing enough to protect their customers' information," said George Tubin, senior security strategist at Trusteer, a computer security company.

The attack comes as LivingSocial struggles to handle a decline in consumer and merchant demand for daily deals. The company raised $110 million from investors, including Amazon earlier this year, but was forced to make large concessions to get the new money.

Amazon invested $56 million in LivingSocial in the first quarter, according to a regulatory filing on Friday, which also revealed the company had a first-quarter operating loss of $44 million on revenue of $135 million.

LivingSocial said on Friday it was beginning to contact more than 50 million customers whose data may have been affected by the cyber attack.

LivingSocial told customers in an email that they should log on to LivingSocial.com to create a new password for their accounts.

"We also encourage you, for your own personal data security, to consider changing password(s) on any other sites on which you use the same or similar password(s)," LivingSocial Chief Executive Tim O'Shaughnessy wrote in the email.

"We are sorry this incident occurred."

All Things D reported the cyber attack earlier on Friday.

(Reporting by Alistair Barr; Editing by Tim Dobbyn, Bernard Orr and Andre Grenon)

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Before You Go

Creepy Apps
Girls Around Me(01 of07)
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Despite its name, the controversial Girls Around Me iPhone app let the user find girls or guys near his or her location. The app used publicly available photos from Facebook and location check-ins from Foursquare, letting the app-user check out the faces of nearby strangers, who didn't now their data was being used in this way. According to the Wall Street Journal, after stalking concerns were raised by sites like Cult of Mac, Foursquare cut off access to the app so locations would no longer be available to be paired with Facebook photos. The app's creators then pulled Girls Around Me from the App Store. (credit:Cult of Mac)
Spy Guide(02 of07)
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Available for both the iPhone and Android phones for just $1.99, Bustedbooks.com'sSpy Guide app gives users step-by-step directions on how to spy on text messages, email accounts, computers, cell phone records and more. It's more of an instruction manual than anything, but it's the perfect app to use if you suspect your lover is cheating. Way easier than talking it out, eh? (Yikes.) (credit:Getty)
Stealth SMS Parental Control(03 of07)
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Sure, there are parents out there who are genuinely concerned about their child's well-being, but those who invest $4.02 in this app might possibly be crossing a line. According to the Google Play description of Stealth SMS Parental Control, developed by Mobile Monkeys, this app will send all of a child's incoming and outgoing text messages directly to his or her parent's phone. All a parent has to do is sneakily install the app on the phone of his or her child.To be fair, the developers advise parents thus: "Before you take any drastic measures and have your children grounded, spend a little time investigating in what is really going on." (credit:Getty)
Security Cam(04 of07)
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At first glance, this Security Cam app, developed by Crowded Road and available for $9.99 through the App Store, seems like it could be a useful tool for security-conscious iPhone users. However, if you read what the app allows an iPhone to do, you'll realize the creepy implications.First off, the app enables your iPhone to take pictures at a specific frequency and have it start snapping when motion or a certain audio level is detected; the pictures can be exported later. Furthermore, the iPhone can be put in "Stealth Mode" so its display turns off even when the app is active. If you ever see a random iPhone lying around, be wary: It could be spying on you. (credit:Crowded Road / iTunes)
Background Check(05 of07)
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Available for both iPhone and Android for free, Background Check was developed by public record search service BeenVerified. The app lets users perform one free background check every month (if you want to run more than one in a month, you'll have to pay) and allows them to access criminal records, social networking information, property records, and more of whomever they want.[via PCMag] (credit:Getty)
Butt Analyzer(06 of07)
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Yes, you read that right. The Butt Analyzer app is available for free on Google Play, and, let's you calculate the attractiveness of whichever derriere you choose -- including your own! -- on a scale of 1 to 10. All you have to do is snap a picture of said derriere. The developer, YauSoft, adds in: "It supports both men's and women's butts." Good to know.[via Reddit] (credit:Yausoft / Google Play)
Creepy(07 of07)
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While this isn't a mobile phone app, the desktop app Creepy just couldn't be skipped. Developed by Ioannis Kakavas, Creepy is a chilling take on location-based social discovery apps like Highlight. But while those who sign up for Highlight select certain information to broadcast, Creepy pulls together all public information about one person that is available online and plots it on a map when possible. According to Kakavas, one of his goals in creating the app was to raise awareness about one's privacy."References in mainstream media (TV, newspapers, radio) and of course blogs/twitter gave the project enough exposure to send the message across," Kakavas wrote in a March 29 blog post. "I have no metrics, but I think it was a good scare for social network fanatics and a wake up call for people to take their locational privacy a little more seriously. Or at least just a good step towards it. Or at least that's what I want to believe." (credit:Ioannis Kakavas)