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Symantec's identity theft protection service,Foreign Archives LifeLock, has reportedly exposed millions of customer email addresses due to a website bug.
LifeLock's email marketing webpage was taken down briefly after alerted by security journalist and researcher Brian Krebs, who published the flaw on his blog.
SEE ALSO: Google announces its first foray into the security key marketThe vulnerability allowed anyone with a web browser to collect customer email addresses by changing a number in the URL, which is used to unsubscribe from LifeLock's communications.
Each sequential number corresponds to a customer record, and changing that number revealed an email address on the webpage.
Krebs was alerted of the flaw by another researcher, Nathan Reese, who was able to create a script which pulled emails from the website. Reese managed to retrieve 70 emails before stopping.
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It's an attractive vulnerability to phishers wanting to target LifeLock customers, who come to the service to protect their personal data.
When Mashable attempted access of the flaw, the vulnerability was no longer working, with the webpage requiring an email to unsubscribe from LifeLock's communications.
A Symantec spokesperson explained via email that the "issue was not a vulnerability in the LifeLock member portal."
"The issue has been fixed and was limited to potential exposure of email addresses on a marketing page, managed by a third party, intended to allow recipients to unsubscribe from marketing emails," the statement added.
"Based on our investigation, aside from the 70 email address accesses reported by the researcher, we have no indication at this time of any further suspicious activity on the marketing opt-out page."
Back in 2015, LifeLock paid $100 million to settle Federal Trade Commission contempt charges after failing to secure consumers’ personal data, and allegedly engaging in deceptive advertising.
LifeLock has more than 4.5 million users, according to a 2017 press release. It was acquired by Symantec in 2016 for $2.3 billion.
UPDATE: July 26, 2018, 3:34 p.m. AEST Added a statement from Symantec.
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