Heartbleed: One Year Later

Have things gotten better? Seems not...

In April 2014 researchers discovered the Heartbleed security bug. Dubbed "the most dangerous security flaw on the web" it affected over 500,000 websites and dominated national news for weeks.

Concerned by the growing frequency of hacks, breaches and other online security vulnerabilities that have taken place in the year since, Dashlane commissioned a study (conducted on their behalf by Harris Poll in March 2015 among over 2,000 US adults ages 18+) to gauge public awareness and knowledge about online privacy, security and protection. The results in our infographic may surprise you.

Dashlane also assembled a team of experts from the realms of business, advocacy and academia to provide the public with an assessment of the fallout from Heartbleed, as well as analyze the online security and privacy challenges that lie ahead. Check out our video below to see what they had to say.

To download the full report + methodology and our infographic, click here.

Embed our infographic:

Minimize the infographic Dashlane Password Manager - Heartbleed: One Year Later

What do the experts have to say?

Featuring:

Nuala O'Connor
CEO & President

Center for Democracy
& Technology

Catherine Lotrionte
Director

Georgetown University
Cyber Project

Todd Simpson
CSO

AVG Technologies

Sunday Yokubaitis
President

Golden Frog

"Attacks such as Heartbleed are becoming more commonplace, and larger in scale, and it's critical that everyone is aware and educated about the threats as they affect all of us. Everyone in the digital world needs to know that they are their own first line of defense when it comes to online security."

Emmanuel Schalit
CEO

Dashlane

To download the full report + methodology and our infographic, click here.