Gnome.org Compromised?
Garden GNOME writes "The GNOME sysadmin team has just announced that the main GNOME web server has probably been intruded into, leading to the shutdown of the GNOME website, (including bugzilla.gnome.org, art.gnome.org and developer.gnome.org). The GNOME mailing lists, and CVS servers seem to be up, though the FTP server was immediately taken down as a precautionary measure (released sources are believed to be intact). This is bad, because GNOME 2.6 was supposed to be released tomorrow. Let's hope it is a false alarm."
The Slashbots will point blame at the admins. However, if it were Microsoft...
Well...I suppose that if this is a new vulnerability, it's better that they go after a high-profile webserver with a good admin team that can catch the attack than that they attack many poorly-adminned ones.
May we never see th
if Linux boxes were not attacked security would not be as good. Look at this in a positive manner. At least on Linux the problem will be remedied within hours and life goes on.
At least they caught it now, instead of after the release. Now the code can be checked before it goes out, instead of everyone worrying about whether they downloaded compromised code
But, just like in previous break-ins to other systems (Gentoo, Debian, Savannah), they're taking the correct actions by shutting everything down and BEING CAREFUL. I often wonder if commercial companies are always this fastidious.
:)
You can't beat all the crackers, but handling a bad situation correctly should be commended. Good job, GNOME team!
I'm eagerly awaiting 2.6, too, I may add!
-Erwos
Plausible conjecture should not be misrepresented as proof positive.
That's the wrong attitude to take. If a Linux-based server is compromised because of software flaws, that's a perfectly legitimate point in an argument about security, just as the compromise of a Windows-based server because of a software flaw would be. If there's a real vulnerability that let somebody crack the system (as opposed to a misconfiguration or incorrect belief that the system was broken into) it needs to be fixed pronto, rather than written off as a PR event.
There's no point in questioning authority if you aren't going to listen to the answers.
You know...honestly...
There have been serveral major, high profile compromises of numerous FOSS servers in the past twelve months. Including a compromise of the GNU source repository.
Microsoft has not made a big deal out of these (at least as far as I've seen). Whereas every security flaw at Microsoft is treated by Slashdot as if someone got access to the crown jewels (well, admittedly the Windows source is running around all over the place...)
Microsoft has really been acting a lot nicer towards FOSS folks about security lapses.
That being said, I'm just *waiting* for a sourceforge compromise. That would be a *huge* hit, and it just plain has to happen sooner or later.
It would be nice if a couple of distributions put out basic *up-to-date* HOWTOs of best practices on how to set up minimal, secure servers using their distribution.
May we never see th
You can't compare a Linux distribution with hundreds of packages to Windows, which is basically a kernel/GUI/browser combo.
Try using (for Linux) the number of kernel/X11/Mozilla vulnerabilities instead and at least you'll start making sense.
I fully expect a bunch of lame Microsoft jokes.
But let's be real, here. Last year in the span of six months, Debian, Gentoo, and GNU (twice!) were compromised. Now GNOME.
Can you honestly rail on Microsoft? When was the last time their servers were compromised? I only vaguely recall something in 2000 about alleged stolen source code, and a real good that has turned out all these years later. As for this year's stolen source code, Slashdot never reported this but it was taken from a Linux computer at MainSoft.
Just funny how things are viewed around here, with a certain bias some people don't even realize they have.
Why cant these idiots find something else to do with their time then screw up systems. ( be it some OSS project or a commercial behemoth )
Perhaps we just need to forget the courts, and find people that do this and take care of the problem.
All it does is make everyone's life harder, it doesn't get 'them' anywhere...
Disclaimer: I'm not even a Gnome fan.. it's the principle.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
I'd actaulyl think the code might have been touched. The timing of the hack is interesting because it is so close to a release. If I was going to try and plant something I'd wait until just before it goes out the door in a mssive release. Less chance of getting caught and biggest dispersal oppurtunity. Sigh
So, when is the FBI going to accounce their special task force to track down these dangerous hackers? After all, isn't that what they did when the Microsoft code was leaked? Something tells me this won't even make the FBI's radar, though...
"Save the whales, feed the hungry, free the mallocs" -- author unknown
We have to remember that most of the people working on Gnome and/or maintaining the servers are volunteers. That said, I have to tip my hat to these people for the very professional action they provided post the compromise. Taking down the compromised server, informing the community, and, most importantly, not releasing premature statements of blame or excuses (which is more than what I can say for a lot of professional companies).