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    Wednesday, July 15, 2020

    Cube World CubeWorld's Downfall

    Cube World CubeWorld's Downfall


    CubeWorld's Downfall

    Posted: 14 Jul 2020 07:49 PM PDT

    If you haven't watched this video, make sure you do to get a better idea on the game and development as a whole — it also goes over how something may have happened to Wallay and describes how what he is doing is not likely to be a scam but due to personal problems that should have been easier to handle.

    So, if you plan on developing a mod, make sure to keep these things in mind!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wAm3sFRqJLI

    submitted by /u/Neoslayer
    [link] [comments]

    New info about Wollay etc... from 'haveibeenpwned'

    Posted: 15 Jul 2020 05:04 AM PDT

    For shits and giggles I submitted the support, wollay and pixxie @ picroma email addresses into haveibeenpwned.com

    I'll cut and paste the findings below:

    [wollay@picroma.com](mailto:wollay@picroma.com) results:

    Breaches you were pwned in

    A "breach" is an incident where data has been unintentionally exposed to the public. Using the 1Password password manager helps you ensure all your passwords are strong and unique such that a breach of one service doesn't put your other services at risk.

    📷

    Data Enrichment Exposure From PDL Customer: In October 2019, security researchers Vinny Troia and Bob Diachenko identified an unprotected Elasticsearch server holding 1.2 billion records of personal data. The exposed data included an index indicating it was sourced from data enrichment company People Data Labs (PDL) and contained 622 million unique email addresses. The server was not owned by PDL and it's believed a customer failed to properly secure the database. Exposed information included email addresses, phone numbers, social media profiles and job history data.

    Compromised data: Email addresses, Employers, Geographic locations, Job titles, Names, Phone numbers, Social media profiles

    📷

    River City Media Spam List (spam list): In January 2017, a massive trove of data from River City Media was found exposed online. The data was found to contain almost 1.4 billion records including email and IP addresses, names and physical addresses, all of which was used as part of an enormous spam operation. Once de-duplicated, there were 393 million unique email addresses within the exposed data.

    Compromised data: Email addresses, IP addresses, Names, Physical addresses

    📷

    Verifications.io: In February 2019, the email address validation service verifications.io suffered a data breach. Discovered by Bob Diachenko and Vinny Troia, the breach was due to the data being stored in a MongoDB instance left publicly facing without a password and resulted in 763 million unique email addresses being exposed. Many records within the data also included additional personal attributes such as names, phone numbers, IP addresses, dates of birth and genders. No passwords were included in the data. The Verifications.io website went offline during the disclosure process, although an archived copy remains viewable.

    Compromised data: Dates of birth, Email addresses, Employers, Genders, Geographic locations, IP addresses, Job titles, Names, Phone numbers, Physical addresses

    [pixxie@picroma.com](mailto:pixxie@picroma.com)

    Good news — no pwnage found!

    No breached accounts and no pastes (subscribe to search sensitive breaches)

    [support@picroma.com](mailto:support@picroma.com)

    Breaches you were pwned in

    A "breach" is an incident where data has been unintentionally exposed to the public. Using the 1Password password manager helps you ensure all your passwords are strong and unique such that a breach of one service doesn't put your other services at risk.

    📷

    Exactis: In June 2018, the marketing firm Exactis inadvertently publicly leaked 340 million records of personal data. Security researcher Vinny Troia of Night Lion Security discovered the leak contained multiple terabytes of personal information spread across hundreds of separate fields including addresses, phone numbers, family structures and extensive profiling data. The data was collected as part of Exactis' service as a "compiler and aggregator of premium business & consumer data" which they then sell for profiling and marketing purposes. A small subset of the exposed fields were provided to Have I Been Pwned and contained 132 million unique email addresses.

    Compromised data: Credit status information, Dates of birth, Education levels, Email addresses, Ethnicities, Family structure, Financial investments, Genders, Home ownership statuses, Income levels, IP addresses, Marital statuses, Names, Net worths, Occupations, Personal interests, Phone numbers, Physical addresses, Religions, Spoken languages

    ---

    Now, if one had access to those databases and nobody had changed the password since then...well. Interesting though.

    submitted by /u/PropaneJesus
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