In February 2018, the diet and exercise service MyFitnessPal suffered a data breach. The incident exposed 144 million unique email addresses alongside usernames, IP addresses and passwords stored as SHA-1 and bcrypt hashes (the former for earlier accounts, the latter for newer accounts). In 2019, the data appeared listed for sale on a dark web marketplace (along with several other large breaches) and subsequently began circulating more broadly.
Last June of 2019 a dehashed version of this database started circulating. After verifying the data the info is correct and valid.
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In February 2018, the diet and exercise service MyFitnessPal suffered a data breach. The incident exposed 144 million unique email addresses alongside usernames, IP addresses and passwords stored as SHA-1 and bcrypt hashes (the former for earlier accounts, the latter for newer accounts). In 2019, the data appeared listed for sale on a dark web marketplace (along with several other large breaches) and subsequently began circulating more broadly.
Last June of 2019 a dehashed version of this database started circulating. After verifying the data the info is correct and valid.
[b]Download:[/b]
http://thacorag.com/1oGM
[b]Download 2:[/b]
http://nitroflare.com/view/3A765BD4D3642FA/myfitnesspal_emailpass_50M.rar