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Go Games

High

Go Games suffered a breach in October 2015, exposing 3.4M user records including emails, usernames, IPs, and salted MD5-hashed passwords.

Records exposed
3,430,083 records
Breach date
Breach Oct 24, 2015
Last update
Updated Jan 11, 2020

What data was exposed?

Fields reported as compromised in this breach record.

Email addressesIP addressesPasswordsUsernames

Why does this breach matter?

In-depth analysis of the breach and its implications.

The Go Games platform, an online manga website, experienced a data security incident around October 2015, resulting in the exposure of sensitive data belonging to approximately 3.4 million users. The compromised data encompassed usernames, passwords hashed with salted MD5, email addresses, and IP addresses. Despite attempts to reach Go Games regarding the breach, they did not respond. This data breach was disclosed to the public through dehashed.com and later included in the HaveIBeenPwned database.

Impact Analysis

Understanding the scope and consequences of this breach.

User Impact
Users may face risks of identity fraud, account takeovers, and phishing attacks due to compromised credentials and identifiers.
Business Impact
The organization endured reputational damage and potential regulatory scrutiny due to the breach.
Affected Sectors
  • Digital Entertainment
Geographic Impact
  • Global

What You Should Do

Recommended actions to take in response to this breach.

If You Were Affected

  • Update passwords on all accounts sharing credentials with the breached platform.
  • Utilize multifactor authentication where possible.
  • Monitor accounts for unauthorized access and enable alerts.

Preventive Measures

  • Regularly update passwords, avoiding reuse across multiple platforms.
  • Ensure safe storage of credentials using modern hashing algorithms like bcrypt.
  • Stay informed via tools like breach notification services.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this breach and what it means for you.

Usernames, passwords hashed with salted MD5, email addresses, and IP addresses were compromised.