Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Computing
  4. Mobile
  5. Web
  6. News

Yahoo was hacked in 2013, and more than 1 billion accounts were compromised

Add as a preferred source on Google

Yahoo is already dealing with some customer distrust issues thanks to a hack that took place in September, and now new information about another hack has emerged and could really be the final nail in the long overdue Yahoo coffin.

The company has disclosed a hack that took place way back in August 2013, in which hackers obtained data from a stunning 1 billion accounts. Yahoo claims this information could include names, email address, phone numbers, dates of birth, encrypted passwords, and even the answers to some security questions, both encrypted and unencrypted.

Recommended Videos

It’s currently unknown exactly how this hack happened, as well as why it took so long for anyone to find out about it. Yahoo itself apparently didn’t learn about the hack until it began investigating the September hack — but that begs another question: How did it take so long for Yahoo to discover a hack of this scale?

The company is quick to point out that, according to its investigation, no passwords in clear text were obtained, nor any credit card data or bank information.

“Payment card data and bank account information are not stored in the system the company believes was affected,” Yahoo Chief Information Security Officer Bob Lord said in a statement.

Yahoo says that it will notify everyone it thinks was impacted by the hack, and that it believes all the unencrypted security questions and answers were made invalid. If you suspect that your account may have been compromised, Yahoo suggests that you review your account for suspicious activity and be wary of any phishing scams.

Unfortunately for Yahoo customers, this isn’t the only hack the company has suffered from. In September Yahoo, underwent a “state-sponsored” hack in which information was stolen from 500 million accounts.

Yahoo is currently in the midst of an acquisition be Verizon, which has agreed to pay a hefty $4.83 billion for the company. It’s unclear how and if the disclosure of this hack will affect that acquisition.

We’ve reached out to Yahoo for more information and will update this story if and when we hear back.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra: Everything we know about Samsung’s next flagship foldable
Though it will feature improvements across the board, the memory crisis might not spare Samsung’s Fold 8 Ultra.
Electronics, Speaker, White Board

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra is not the phone that reimagines what a foldable looks like. As that job falls to its sibling, the wider-screen Galaxy Z Fold 8, the Ultra could come as the direct successor to the Galaxy Z Fold 7, with the same tall, narrow design and the same book-style proportions, for the same audience. 

If you've used a Samsung Galaxy Z Fold in the past and think that the shape is perfect for you, the Fold 8 Ultra could be just the right phone for you. It has a redesigned inner display, a substantially larger battery, faster charging, and the new Flex Titanium technology designed to minimize the crease that has troubled Samsung's foldables for years. 

Read more
Your OnePlus phone is switching to ColorOS, whether you like it or not
OnePlus has confirmed that OxygenOS is being phased out, and eligible devices will get the option to update to ColorOS 17 once it becomes available.
Person holding OnePlus 15.

OnePlus has confirmed that OxygenOS, the Android skin that helped define the brand for more than a decade, is being retired in favor of ColorOS. The confirmation came buried in the community forum post announcing its exit from North America and Europe.

ColorOS replaces OxygenOS worldwide

Read more
Personal Intelligence in Search now connects to Google Calendar
Google Search AI can now read your Calendar and add events automatically
Google Calendar

Google is taking another step toward making Search feel less like a search engine and more like a personal assistant. The company has announced that AI Mode's Personal Intelligence can now connect directly to Google Calendar, allowing it not only to reference your schedule but also to create calendar events on your behalf.

Until now, Personal Intelligence mainly pulled information from apps like Gmail and Google Photos to provide more relevant responses. Calendar changes the equation because it becomes the first connected Google app that doesn't just provide context. It can actively act. The feature is rolling out now to users in the United States, with a wider international rollout planned later.

Read more