Hi Eric,

I am sorry but I am not able to share this information.

Regards,

Jérémie

On 29/04/14 11:35, Eric Mill wrote:
Please respond, here or publicly, with the password encryption and salting
methods that were in place for the passwords which were improperly accessed.

You need to give affected users the ability to gauge the severity of the
breach, and their course of action in response.

-- Eric


On Tue, Apr 29, 2014 at 8:13 AM, W3C Member Access <[email protected]>wrote:

Eric Mill,

W3C has discovered unauthorized access to its user database, including
retrieval of encrypted passwords. As such W3C is requiring all of our
users to
change their passwords.

If you have already changed your password in 2014, you may ignore this
message.

Please read more at the following article:

http://www.w3.org/blog/2014/03/w3c-password/

Accounts that have not been updated by 2014-05-12 will be disabled.  If
you do
not see this message until after that deadline, you can recover your
account
using the recovery system linked from the article above.

     email:    [email protected]
     username: konklone

If you would like to verify the authenticity of this message, please visit
the
W3C home page at w3.org and follow the "Help and FAQ" link at the bottom
of
the page.

Note: Some of our systems have a modest delay in updating your password.

Please also take a few minutes to update your affiliation and contact
information in your W3C Account profile.

https://www.w3.org/users/myprofile

Thank you,

Jérémie
[email protected]

--
This message was sent by the W3C Account Management System





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