Video game streaming service Twitch suffers major data breach
Image credit: yahoonews |
Twitch, the popular Amazon-owned video game streaming service, has suffered an enormous data breach, with reams of sensitive company files shared online.
Some of the files, viewed by NBC News, include apparent
payment information for tens of at least hundreds of thousands of streamers.
Twitch is massively popular among the legions of video
gamers who stream themselves or esports competitions. Around 7 million users
stream videos on Twitch every month, the company says, and streamers have the
option to monetize their videos, with payment depending on their viewership.
Amazon purchased the company for $970 million in 2014.
It’s unclear exactly how the files were obtained or by whom.
On Wednesday evening, an anonymous user posted a link to download the files to
the web forum 4chan, claiming that the intention was to attack Twitch because
of its stranglehold on the video game streaming industry.
“Their community is also a disgusting toxic cesspool, so to
foster more disruption and competition in the online video streaming space, we
have completely pawned them,” the leaker wrote.
“Jeff Bezos paid $970 million for this, we’re giving it away
FOR FREE,” the leaker added.
Twitch users have long complained that the platform doesn’t do enough to protect users from harassment. LGBTQ streamers and streamers of color organized a “Day Off Twitch” boycott last month.
The payout files cover the past three years and identify
users by their user identification numbers. The records indicate that the
payments vary wildly, with many streamers receiving no proceeds and some
receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Twitch declined to answer specific questions but confirmed
on Twitter that it had suffered a data breach and was investigating its extent.
“This breach is massive in scope,” said Rachel Tobac, the
CEO of SocialProof Security, a cybersecurity firm
Source nbcnews
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