Yahoo theft breach costs CEO Marissa Mayer millions in bonus

The company has incurred $16 million in direct costs so far related to the breaches, a report said

IANS  |  San Francisco 

Yahoo CEO Marissa Meyer
Yahoo CEO Marissa Meyer

US tech giant Yahoo's top lawyer, Ronald S. Bell, has resigned and its Marissa Mayer lost her 2016 after a board investigation of the 2014 theft of information on over 500 million user accounts, the media reported.

Senior executives, company lawyers and information security staff were aware of the hack and also knew about subsequent attempts to break into the affected accounts in 2015 and 2016 but failed to "properly comprehend or investigate" the situation, Yahoo's board of directors said in a securities filing on Wednesday.

The board "did not conclude that there was an intentional suppression of relevant information", The New York Times reported.

Bell, a long-time at Yahoo, resigned on Wednesday and would receive no payments in connection with his departure, the company said. He "appeared to be taking the blame for the company's security failures".

The company's chief information security officer at the time of the 2014 breach, Alex Stamos, left for Facebook in 2015 after repeated battles with Mayer over security priorities.

The hackers, which believes were connected to a foreign government, used the stolen information to forge a type of software called a "cookie" that could be used to access 32 million accounts, the company said.

Mayer, who will also give up her 2017 equity compensation in connection with the incident, said she did not learn of the breach until September 2016, the daily said.

"However, I am the of the company and since this incident happened during my tenure, I have agreed to forgo my annual and my annual equity grant this year," she wrote.

Under Mayer's employment agreement, her annual target is $2 million a year and her annual stock award is supposed to be no less than $12 million a year. Her base salary is $1 million a year.

said it had revised its procedures for responding to cyber security incidents, including the reporting of such incidents to senior executives and the board.

The company has incurred $16 million in direct costs so far related to the breaches, the daily added.

Yahoo theft breach costs CEO Marissa Mayer millions in bonus

The company has incurred $16 million in direct costs so far related to the breaches, a report said

The company has incurred $16 million in direct costs so far related to the breaches, a report said
US tech giant Yahoo's top lawyer, Ronald S. Bell, has resigned and its Marissa Mayer lost her 2016 after a board investigation of the 2014 theft of information on over 500 million user accounts, the media reported.

Senior executives, company lawyers and information security staff were aware of the hack and also knew about subsequent attempts to break into the affected accounts in 2015 and 2016 but failed to "properly comprehend or investigate" the situation, Yahoo's board of directors said in a securities filing on Wednesday.

The board "did not conclude that there was an intentional suppression of relevant information", The New York Times reported.

Bell, a long-time at Yahoo, resigned on Wednesday and would receive no payments in connection with his departure, the company said. He "appeared to be taking the blame for the company's security failures".

The company's chief information security officer at the time of the 2014 breach, Alex Stamos, left for Facebook in 2015 after repeated battles with Mayer over security priorities.

The hackers, which believes were connected to a foreign government, used the stolen information to forge a type of software called a "cookie" that could be used to access 32 million accounts, the company said.

Mayer, who will also give up her 2017 equity compensation in connection with the incident, said she did not learn of the breach until September 2016, the daily said.

"However, I am the of the company and since this incident happened during my tenure, I have agreed to forgo my annual and my annual equity grant this year," she wrote.

Under Mayer's employment agreement, her annual target is $2 million a year and her annual stock award is supposed to be no less than $12 million a year. Her base salary is $1 million a year.

said it had revised its procedures for responding to cyber security incidents, including the reporting of such incidents to senior executives and the board.

The company has incurred $16 million in direct costs so far related to the breaches, the daily added.

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