Adobe has confirmed that a recent cyber-attack compromised
many more customer accounts than first reported.
It added that the attackers had also accessed details from
an unspecified number of accounts that had been unused for two or more years.
The firm had originally said 2.9 million accounts had been
affected.
Adobe has also announced that the hackers stole parts of the
source code to Photoshop, its popular picture-editing program.
It had previously revealed that the source code for its
Acrobat PDF document-editing software and ColdFusion web application creation
products had also been illegally accessed.
The information could allow programmers to analyse how
Adobe's software works and copy its techniques.
In May, Adobe shifted several of its products to a
subscription model, meaning its customers needed to register an account and
provide their payment card details in order to qualify for upgrades.
Passwords reset
A spokeswoman for Adobe defended the fact its initial
statement did not reveal the full scale of the issue.
"In our public disclosure, we communicated the
information we could validate," she said.
"As we have been going through the process of notifying
customers whose Adobe IDs and passwords we believe to be involved, we have been
eliminating invalid records. Any number communicated in the meantime would have
been inaccurate."
She added that the firm still believed that encrypted credit
and debit card numbers, product expiration dates and other information relating
to customer orders had only been compromised in the case of the original 2.9
million users identified.
Regarding the additional 35.1 million users, the company
thinks only customer IDs and encrypted passwords have been affected.
It has since reset the passwords as a precaution against the
encryption being cracked. However, this would not protect its customers from
the threat of having their accounts on other services attacked if they used the
same usernames and passwords.
According to Brian Krebs, a security blogger who first
reported the breach, a file was uploaded to a hacking forum last weekend that
appeared to contain millions of usernames and hashed passwords taken from
Adobe.
The fact the passwords had been hashed means that they had
been converted into a string of characters using a process that cannot be
reversed to reveal the original text.
The spokeswoman for Adobe said the document had since been
removed from the site at the firm's request, and added that her company had
seen no indication of unauthorised activity on any of the accounts involved in
the incident.
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