Nissan says hackers stole user IDs and hashed passwords

Nissan has found malicious software on its network that stole employee user IDs and hashed passwords, but said that no personal information or emails appeared to have been compromised.

The car company released a statement on April 20, one week after the intrusion was detected. Jeff Kuhlman, Nissan’s head of global communications, said that Nissan delayed disclosing the breach sooner in order to cleanse its network of the malicious software and prevent tipping off the hackers.

“We are working with security software specialists and making sure that all the doors are closed and that going forward we have the most secure system we can have,” Kuhlman said.

Nissan said in a statement that the malware accessed a data store that held employee user account credentials. Kuhlman said the company is not sure what information the hackers were after.

“As a result of our swift and deliberate actions we believe that our systems are secure and that no customer, employee or program data has been compromised,” according to the statement.

Nissan said it would “continue to vigilantly maintain our protection and detection systems and related countermeasures to keep ahead of emerging threats.”

Storing hashed passwords rather than passwords in clear text is considered a good security practice. A hash is a cryptographic representation of a password, but the hash can be converted back to the original password using modest computing power and password cracking programs.

The shorter and less complicated the password, such as those without capital letters and numbers, the faster it can be decoded.

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