Sony: 93,000 NEW PlayStation, Online Entertainment accounts hacked

Well, today is not a good day for sony. On Wednesday morning, Philip Reitinger, Sony’s newly hired chief  information security officer, said that about 93,000 PlayStation Network and Sony Online Entertainment user accounts have been breached in a Web attack. So far this year 90 million Sony user accounts have been compromised, this includes Playstation as well as Sony’s cloud-based Qriocity music service, Sony music websites and Sony  Pictures websites have been hacked this year too.

All i have to say is someone has some “splain’in” to do.

Reitinger, who Sony hired in September, is a veteran of the online security world and formerly was a top security official at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and Microsoft Corp.’s chief trustworthy infrastructure strategist. He’s also worked for the  Department of Defense and the Department of Justice and holds a law degree from Yale.

in a blog post titled “An Important Message From Sony’s Chief Information Security Officer” said the following:

+ Posted by Philip Reitinger // SVP & Chief Information Security Officer, Sony Group

We want to let you know that we have detected attempts on Sony Entertainment Network, PlayStation Network and Sony Online Entertainment (“Networks”) services to test a massive set of sign-in IDs and passwords against our network database. These attempts appear to include a large amount of data obtained from one or more compromised lists from other companies, sites or other sources. In this case, given that the data tested against our network consisted of sign-in ID-password pairs, and that the overwhelming majority of the pairs resulted in failed matching attempts, it is likely the data came from another source and not from our Networks. We have taken steps to mitigate the activity.

Less than one tenth of one percent (0.1%) of our PSN, SEN and SOE audience may have been affected. There were approximately 93,000 accounts globally (PSN/SEN: approximately 60,000 accounts; SOE: approximately 33,000) where the attempts succeeded in verifying those accounts’ valid sign-in IDs and passwords, and we have temporarily locked these accounts. Only a small fraction of these 93,000 accounts showed additional activity prior to being locked. We are currently reviewing those accounts for unauthorized access, and will provide more updates as we have them. Please note, if you have a credit card associated with your account, your credit card number is not at risk. We will work with any users whom we confirm have had unauthorized purchases made to restore amounts in the PSN/SEN or SOE wallet.

As a preventative measure, we are requiring secure password resets for those PSN/SEN accounts that had both a sign-in ID and password match through this attempt. If you are in the small group of PSN/SEN users who may have been affected, you will receive an email from us at the address associated with your account that will prompt you to reset your password.

Similarly, the SOE accounts that were matched have been temporarily turned off. If you are among the small group of affected SOE customers, you will receive an email from us at the address associated with your account that will advise you on next steps in order to validate your account credentials and have your account turned back on.

We want to take this opportunity to remind our consumers about the increasingly common threat of fraudulent activity online, as well as the importance of having a strong password and having a username/password combination that is not associated with other online services or sites. We encourage you to choose unique, hard-to-guess passwords and always look for unusual activity in your account.

I understand he has only been @ Sony since September, so i’ll give him some slack… im happy they reported it quickly this time.

I guess Sony and RIM (Blackberry) both have bad news this week. Although i believe RIM will have a more dramatic loss of customers than Sony..

 

Time will tell…