Hackers try to gain access to Spotify accounts using a database of 380 million records with login credentials and personal information collected from various sources.
For years, users complained that their Spotify accounts were being compromised even after their passwords were changed and new playlists appeared on their profiles or that they had added foreign contacts from other countries.
A new report details how a database containing over 380 millions records, including login credentials, is actively used to hack into Spotify accounts.
300 million subscriptions with user information for Spotify account breach
The usual attack used to steal accounts is called a "credential breach attack". With it, hackers use usernames / password combinations that have been leaked in previous breaches to gain access to user accounts and other online platforms.
Today, VPNMentor released a report on a database that was exposed on the Internet, which contained 300 million combinations of usernames and passwords used on Spotify.
Each record in this database contains a login name (email address), a password, and possibly these credentials can successfully connect to a account Spotify, as shown below.
It is not known how the 300 million files were collected. Most likely through data breaches or large "collections" of credentials, usually issued by hackers for free on some platforms.
Researchers believe that the 300 million files listed in the database allowed hackers to hack 300.000 to 350.000 Spotify accounts.
For users whose accounts were compromised, Spotify reset their passwords in July.
Spotify does not support auditing identity multi-factor , which would greatly increase the security of accounts, even though users have been asking for it for some time.