
If you use PlayNow in Sask., Manitoba or B.C., hackers may have your password
CTV
The company that runs a regulated online gambling website in Saskatchewan, B.C. and Manitoba says hackers have gained access to some of its customers’ passwords.
The company that runs a regulated online gambling website in Saskatchewan, B.C. and Manitoba says hackers have gained access to some of its customers’ passwords.
The B.C. Lottery Corporation (BCLC), which operates PlayNow.com, is encouraging customers to update their pass phrase after it detected a “suspicious” surge in traffic on July 24.
BCLC says the traffic turned out to be the result of “credential stuffing.” Since many people use the same email address and passwords across different online services, hackers were able to use leaked login information from other companies to access accounts on PlayNow.
“We do find this very concerning,” said Matt Lee, a spokesperson with BCLC.
“Obviously a very unfortunate incident and one that we continue to investigate,” Lee said.
He said the account breach impacted less than one per cent of its player base.
“Of that one per cent, an even a smaller subset of players were actually financially impacted from that,” he said.

While Canada is well known for its accomplishments in space — including building the robotic arms used on the Space Shuttle and the International Space Station — the country still has no ability to launch its own satellites. This week, Ottawa committed nearly a quarter‑billion dollars towards changing that.

It’s an enduring stereotype that Canadians are unfailingly nice, quick to apologize even when they have done nothing wrong. But an online urban legend claims the opposite of Canada’s soldiers, painting a picture of troops so brazen in their brutality that international laws were rewritten to rein them in.











