Why did I get an email about Pixlr Data Breach?
The Queen’s IT Services Security team recently became aware of a data breach at Pixlr, an online photo editing application, affecting 1.9 million subscribers. This event may have potentially affected multiple accounts here at Queen’s. As a precaution, Queen’s IT Services will expire the passwords of any Queen’s account found to be listed on the breached Pixlr accounts list and who have not changed their passwords since the list was published.
What should I do to protect myself?
If you received an email message from IT Services concerning the breach and have not changed your password since, you will be sent additional emails requesting you to change your password, prior to your password expiring. NetID passwords are changed at https://netid.queensu.ca/selfservice/login/auth .
We also encourage you to take the following actions to better protect yourself and your information:
What data was compromised?
According to reports, the breach included names, email addresses, social media profiles, the country signed up from and passwords stored as SHA-512 hashes.
Why is Queen’s expiring passwords for potentially breached accounts?
Queen’s account holders who fail to follow safe password practices are at risk when breaches like this occur. To protect your Queen’s account IT Services are taking this action to prevent account compromises by ensuring all accounts associated with the breach have refreshed passwords.
What caused the data breach?
We have no direct information from Pixlr about the cause of the breach. IT Services obtain breach information from the service called “Have I Been Pwned?” . Visiting the website https://haveibeenpwned.com/ will allow you to enter and check your Queen’s University email address against all publicized breaches that reference your Queen’s email address. The site also provides details about the data breach, including links to additional information.