LastPass data breach led to $53K in Bitcoin stolen, lawsuit alleges

Share This Post

A class action is seeking damages from the password manager following a data breach in August 2022.

A class action lawsuit has been filed against password management service LastPass following a data breach from Aug. 2022.

The class action was filed with the U.S. district court of Massachusetts on Jan. 3, by an unnamed plaintiff known only as “John Doe” and on behalf of others similarly situated.

It alleges that the data breach of LastPass has resulted in the theft of around $53,000 worth of Bitcoin.

The plaintiff claimed he began accruing BTC in Jul. 2022 and updated his master password to more than 12 characters using a password generator, as recommended by the LastPass “best practices.”

This was done to enable the storage of private keys in the seemingly secure LastPass customer vault.

When news of the data breach broke, the plaintiff deleted his private information from his customer vault. LastPass was hacked in Aug. 2022, with the attacker stealing encrypted passwords and other data, according to a December statement from the company.

Despite the quick action to delete the data, it appeared to be too late for the plaintiff. The lawsuit read:

“However, on or around Thanksgiving weekend of 2022, Plaintiff’s Bitcoin was stolen using the private keys he stored with Defendant [LastPass].”

“The LastPass Data Breach has, through no fault of his own, exposed him to the theft of his Bitcoin and exposed him to continued risk,” it added.

The suit claims that victims have been put at increased substantial risk of future fraud and misuse of their private information, which may take years to manifest, discover, and detect.

LastPass is being accused of negligence, breach of contract, unjust enrichment, and breach of fiduciary duty, however, the figure sought in damages was not specified.

Related: ‘Third-party incident’ impacted Gemini with 5.7 million emails leaked

According to cybersecurity researcher Graham Cluley, the stolen data includes unencrypted information including company names, user names, billing addresses, telephone numbers, email addresses, IP addresses, and website URLs from password vaults.

In December, LastPass admitted that if customers had weak Master Passwords, the attackers may be able to use brute force to guess this password, allowing them to decrypt the vaults.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

SUI Ready To Test $2 Resistance – Bullish Pattern Suggests New ATH Soon

SUI is currently testing crucial supply levels after an impressive 75% surge from local demand around $1 since mid-September This aggressive price movement has placed the layer-1 blockchain at the

US Bitcoin ETFs Close In on Satoshi’s BTC Stash, Holding 924,768 BTC

Since Jan 11, 2024, twelve US spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have been steadily accumulating bitcoin (BTC) This doesn’t include the hefty BTC stash held by Grayscale’s GBTC,

Ethereum Liquid Staking Hits 14M ETH Milestone, Adding 1.77M in 2024

According to recent data, more than 14 million ether (ETH) is now locked in liquid staking derivatives (LSD) protocols Over the past 12 days, the amount of ETH deposited into these platforms nudged

Analyst Predicts 50% XRP Rally If Bullish Pattern Breaks – Details

XRP is finally gaining traction after days of struggling below the $060 supply level This newfound momentum is reigniting hope among investors and analysts who have been waiting for the altcoin to

Bitcoin Price To Witness Significant Gains In Last 3 Months Of 2024, Historical Data Shows

The price of Bitcoin started the year on a bounce, securing a new all-time high before the end of the first quarter of 2024 However, the second and third quarters weren’t all that rosy for the

BNY Mellon Engages With Regulators, Fed’s 50bps Cut Triggers Crypto Inflows, and More — Week in Review

BNY Mellon is working closely with regulators to offer large-scale crypto custody services Coinshares reported $321 million in digital asset inflows, driven by the Fed’s 50bps interest rate cut