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Data Security

Dropbox Adds Security Following Breach

Dropbox Adds Security Following Breach
August 1, 2012 11:38AM

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To beef up security, Dropbox will be implementing two-factor authentication. New automated mechanisms will be used to help ID suspicious Dropbox activity, and a new page will allow users to see all active logins to an account. Dropbox may also require a user to change a password, if, for example, it's common or hasn't been changed in awhile.

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Dropbox has acknowledged that its storage service has been hacked, and it is adding new security measures. The move comes after a company investigation found that stolen user names and passwords had been used to sign into some Dropbox accounts.

The tip-off was in the form of e-mails from some users, who complained about spam they were receiving at e-mail addresses they used only for their Dropbox accounts. The company said it has contacted the users and helped them protect Relevant Products/Services their accounts.

Two-Factor Authentication

The sequence, according to a posting Tuesday by Aditya Agarwal on the corporate blog, was that one of the stolen passwords had been used to gain access to a Dropbox account of a company employee, which contained a project document with user e-mail addresses.

Agarwal apologized for the slipup, which the company believes led to the spam, and said that "additional controls" have been put in place to prevent such a recurrence by an employee.

Additionally, steps are being taken to improve the security of accounts. Within a few weeks, Agarwal said, two-factor authentication will be implemented. This will require two proofs of identity to sign in, such as the password and a temporary code sent to one's phone.

New automated mechanisms will be used to help ID suspicious activity, and a new page will allow users to see all active logins to an account. The company may also require a user to change a password, if, for example, it's a common password or hasn't been changed in awhile.

The company also "strongly" recommends that a unique password be set for each Web site. Otherwise, Dropbox noted, if one site's password is compromised, all are.

Dropbox for Teams

Dropbox's investigation following the spam complaints initially found that no security breaches had taken place, although that was later revised.

A key question is whether this breach, and the company's response to it, will affect its continuing efforts to market its services for businesses. While competitor Box is more business-oriented, Dropbox has been targeting companies as part of its strategy for growth.

One of the main services it markets to businesses is Dropbox for Teams, launched in October of last year. The service is priced at about $800 annually for five years, and $125 for each additional user. It grows out of the wide use of Dropbox accounts for business purposes and goes beyond the consumer-oriented ones, which are not optimized for more active, version-control-obsessed business users.

Dropbox for Teams provides a generous, although unspecified, amount of storage. It also supports mobile Relevant Products/Services devices and automatic syncing between devices, comes with phone support, and provides administrative tools for monitoring activity and storage usage for each person.

In the face of increasing competition, Dropbox is busily adding new features and pruning older ones. Last month, for example, it dropped support for public folders and updated its app for Apple's iOS platform.

The growing list of cloud Relevant Products/Services-based sharing and storage services competitors includes Microsoft Relevant Products/Services's SkyDrive, Google's Drive, Samsung's S-Cloud service, Apple's iCloud, Amazon Relevant Products/Services's Cloud Drive, and the aforementioned Box.

Tell Us What You Think
Comment:

Name:

Tech Marketer:

Posted: 2012-08-01 @ 2:04pm PT
Security should be a part of service providers core Philosophy; and If security isn’t part of the cloud DNA, good luck bolting it on later.

Here's some useful resource to learn more about Cloud security:

http://www.dincloud.com/security

Hope you'll find it informative and useful.

Jackson Shaw:

Posted: 2012-08-01 @ 12:57pm PT
The company also said that one of those stolen passwords was used to access a Dropbox employee’s account, which contained a project document with user email addresses.

Here are my thoughts on it:
http://jacksonshaw.blogspot.ca/2012/08/will-third-time-be-charm-for-dropbox.html

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