Bad actors entered more than half a million Roku accounts without permission in another cyber incident.
The video streaming company said Friday the latest “credential stuffing” attack of 576,000 accounts came to light in the midst of its efforts to “monitor account activity closely.” Those had been prompted by a prior breach.
The first incident saw bad actors illegally getting into 15,300 accounts through that tactic. Roku let those users know about that incident in March.
ROKU HACKERS BREACH 15,000 ACCOUNTS, USED DATA TO SUBSCRIBE TO STREAMING SERVICES
Sensitive personal data and full payment information did not get exposed in either incident, according to the company.
“There is no indication that Roku was the source of the account credentials used in these attacks or that Roku’s systems were compromised in either incident,” the company said Friday. “Rather, it is likely that login credentials used in these attacks were taken from another source, like another online account, where the affected users may have used the same credentials.”
The bad actors did take advantage of stored payment information in less than 400 instances, buying streaming service subscriptions and hardware. Such accounts will get refunds, the streaming company said.
Roku said account security was a “top priority” for the company.
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It is “implementing a number of controls and countermeasures to detect and deter future credential stuffing incidents.” Those efforts included password resets for impacted users and two-factor authentication for every customer that uses its service, according to Roku.
The pair of breaches hit a “small fraction” of its total users, it said. In the fourth quarter, it reported 80 million active accounts collectively responsible for 29.1 billion streaming hours.
Other companies have faced credential stuffing incidents in recent months. For example, DNA-testing company 23andMe attributed an October breach to the tactic.
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