‘Have I Been Pwned’ creator to take service open source - Android

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‘Have I Been Pwned’ creator to take service open source - Android

Have I Been Pwned website on Android

Online security is a significant issue these days, and as people rely more on internet services, their libraries of accounts and login credentials also grow. Unfortunately, it’s practically guaranteed that somewhere along the line, attackers will breach a service you use and expose your passwords, login details and more. There are plenty of tools to...

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Have I Been Pwned website on Android

Online security is a significant issue these days, and as people rely more on internet services, their libraries of accounts and login credentials also grow.

Unfortunately, it’s practically guaranteed that somewhere along the line, attackers will breach a service you use and expose your passwords, login details and more. There are plenty of tools to help mitigate the threat — password managers, biometric authentication and two-factor authentication (2FA) can all help.

Another popular tool is a website called ‘Have I Been Pwned‘ (HIBP). Made by Troy Hunt, HIBP lets users punch in an email address and see a list of breached accounts attached to that email, as well as details about what data the breach exposed. HIBP launched seven years ago, and now Hunt is taking it open source.

In a blog post, Hunt lays out many of the reasons he plans to take HIBP open source. At the heart of it is that HIBP has always been a community project. But also, many companies use HIBP or something similar to warn people about breaches. Open-sourcing HIBP can help spread it to more places.

Hunt wants to put HIBP in the hands of those who can sustain it

For example, LastPass recently launched a dark web monitoring feature. The Verge reports that LastPass doesn’t use the HIBP database — it checks one hosted by Enzoic instead. However, many services rely on the same ‘k-Anonymity’ API designed by Cloudflare engineering manager Junade Ali to support HIBP.