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Also, I think the passwords this person has are the passwords you originally used when you signed up. Meaning if you've changed your password at least once since signup you were unaffected. Ed, have you ever changed your password? This is just a theory based off a couple things anyway.

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Changed it 3 times. It's been quite a while since my last change though.

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Ahhh okay, I guess it wouldn't hurt to change it again.

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Knowing how skittish Ed is when it comes to anonymity, I can see the allure of doing something like that.

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Oh, gross.

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Why does this matter?

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Edvard, how do you know it isn't someone hijacking your cookies... I'd say you should worry about your own local machine before you worry about security on this place.

I mean I don't think the authors are stupid enough to bury passwords in the cookies, so everything is probably safe...

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by anastacia

Lol... how do you know it's not just TS and Rass fucking with you? 

 

Intuition and context say that's not the case. Anyway, I asked Luna if there's a way to tell my login history. I want to see if anyone was logged in as Edvard at 1 pm GMT today.

Edit: rass said she posted the screenshot one hour later, so the hour I'm interested in is 12 pm GMT...

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He's a narcissist.

He demands the utmost perfection in his life.

http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/news/276836191.html

LOL... good luck with this media battle...

Online, a bazaar bursting with stolen credit card information

Hackers slashed prices by about a third over the weekend on the credit card and debit card information they stole in the Home Depot data breach -- including at stores in Wisconsin, the Public Investigator has found.

The move came Saturday, two days after Home Depot publicly acknowledged that 56 million cards were breached nationwide during the hacking, which lasted from April through Sept. 13.

As the Journal Sentinel reported in an exclusive investigation Thursday, hackers stole information on at least 282,300 cards used in all 26 Wisconsin Home Depot stores.

On Saturday, hackers advertised the "sale" on the illegal website on which the Public Investigator found the information stolen in Wisconsin for sale.

"Price drop. All prices have been lowered!" the website now reads in red font.

The prices do, indeed, seem to have dropped by a third: A Public Investigator analysis Tuesday shows a MasterCard credit card used in Menomonee Falls that was previously advertised at $127.50 is now $85. That was the most expensive card at the time. An Amex gold credit card used in Delafield that sold for $105 less than a week ago is now $70.

The black market site no longer guarantees a 100% valid rate. However, it now offers replacements for cards that don't work within five minutes -- something that wasn't offered the first time around. The site allows customers to buy bulk orders and search by city, expiration date,.

When the Journal Sentinel first accessed the website a couple of weeks ago, the cheapest cards were selling for $2.26.

 

http://fortune.com/2014/09/21/home-depot-stolen-card-information-market/

Online, a bazaar bursting with stolen credit card information

What happens to stolen credit card numbers after high-profile breaches like Home Depot and Target? We investigate the underground market.

The latest Target for retail cyber robbers? Home Depot. (At least, that we know of.) The home improvement retailer recently acknowledged a five-month data breach at its payment terminals that may have compromised 56 million payment cards.

Some have characterized the Home Depot HD 1.67% data breach the largest to date. (This year’s Target breach: 26 million cards over three weeks.) If you’ve shopped at the big-box retailer, though, you’re probably wondering: What happens to all that personal information once it gets into the hands of cyber thieves?

They take it to market, of course.

 

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What? Do you think they are liberating consumer debt, or do you think they are fishing for wanna be black market credit card buyers, or do you think they are selling the credit cards?

Take your pick...

 

 

Edvard, what could you possibly care about a chat room being secure or not? Your own home computer is more of a security risk than any chat system. 

Nobody here is paying Luna a single penny for her efforts... your paranoias don't really matter...

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