I'll add that it only shows up in google search, the whole in their system seems to have been fixed. Can anyone confirm my theory that before you could download a SQL file with everyones info in it?
yes, that is exactly what happend. You could download the whole file directly from their site. They responded swiftly to the mails and took it down, but still this should not have happend in the first place.
Somebody should submit a Google takedown request to get that data removed from Google’s cache.
I imagine the request would be processed faster if the site owner (Intl-Outdoor) were to submit the request. Maybe somebody could suggest this to them.
I just changed my IOS password, but have no idea what the old one was. I know that my BLF password is as complex a password as I use (because I have to use capitals, numbers, punctuation etc, but again, have no idea what it is, and can’t remember how or where to check what passwords Windows 7 stores for me.
Well, people now go crazy about "I have to change my password at IO so nothing bad happens to other sites".. fact is, that the old password was visible and someone probably saved them. Thats why I said: change the password on other sites where you used the same email/password combination.
It was encrypted, but I guess if you had one clear-type password (for example your own) and the matching hash key, you could find out how to decrypt the rest. Not too hard..
well i guess it would be possible to extract all hash keys from the file automatically at once, e.g. with a clever text editor or mma, and then feed the list of MD5's to google webpages such as hash-cracker.com but i dont believe that any of us flashaholics is up to the task. besides, since MD5's are irreversible, the password would have to be in the database of 700 mio strings already. if your password is really unique e.g. the string kreisler then the MD5 could not be decrypted ;)