- TeenSafe offers parents a single and secure method by which they can access and monitor their teen's digital lives. It allows parents to spy on their kids' activities, including their messages, real-time location and more.
U.K.-based security researcher Robert Wiggins has found two exposed TeenSafe servers, leaking the passwords and information of some users of the monitoring service.
Around 10,200 accounts from the past three months were compromised, though that number also includes duplicates.
According to a ZDNet exclusive report, the company left its servers, hosted on Amazon's cloud, unprotected and accessible by anyone without a password.The report said one of the company’s servers, which is hosted on Amazon’s cloud service, leaked people’s Apple IDs, as well as their passwords and user IDs for the service in a plain-text file that could be accessed by anyone, ZDNet reported.
“We have taken action to close one of our servers to the public and begun alerting customers that could potentially be impacted,” a TeenSafe spokesman told ZDNet.
Hell !
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