LastPass Cryptocurrency Stolen Assets Investigation

Chimicles Schwartz Kriner Donaldson-Smith is investigating potential individual and class action claims for LastPass users who stored cryptocurrency access credentials in their LastPass accounts on or before October 26, 2022, and had some or all those cryptocurrency assets stolen because of information exposed during the LastPass data breach in 2022. Based on publicly available information, it appears that LastPass may have caused those users’ losses by failing to (1) promulgate master password settings that provided adequate security, (2) implement a hashing algorithm that provided adequate security, (3) encrypt the user’s sensitive metadata and other personally identifying information attributable to the user, (4) control access to its internal servers, (5) correctly represent the security of its products before and after the data breach, and (6) warn users of the risks associated with the data breach, including the risk of not immediately changing login credentials stored in LastPass.

If you are a LastPass user and believe your crypto currency was stolen because of the LastPass data breach, please complete the form below:

LastPass Crypto (#520)

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