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Ubuntu Servers Hacked

An anonymous reader noted that "Ubuntu had to shutdown 5 of 8 production servers that are sponsored by Canonical, when they started attacking other systems. Canonical blames the community, saying they were community hosted, and were poorly maintained. However, kernel upgrades couldn't be done because of poor backwards compatibility with the very hardware that Canonical had sponsored! While people point fingers at each other it is pretty clear that both sides are equally to blame, the community administrators for practicing bad security practices, such as using unencrypted FTP transfers with accounts, not properly maintaining the system. However Canonical should have been well aware of what they are hosting. The question remains, if any of the files distributed to users have been compromised. A major blow for Canonical though who are attempting to enter the business market with Ubuntu Server."

6 of 330 comments (clear)

  1. Gentoo also recently disclosed security breach by ChazeFroy · · Score: 4, Informative

    This isn't the only Linux distro security breach being disclosed recently. One of Gentoo's web applications was compromised and they are investigating it:

    http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=187971

  2. Not like Debian by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 5, Informative
    This happpened to Debian once. I remember the very careful quality of the notifications, and the forensic analysis, and the fact that it was caught quickly and there thus wasn't much damage. It showed that a volunteer community can be right on top of this sort of problem with as much or more professionality than any paid staff. It's unfortunate that the configuration of Ubuntu and its loco teams has them pointing fingers at each other. And what about those systems that can't be upgraded? Are they, per chance, using proprietary network drivers? If so, well, folks should know better.

    Bruce

  3. Some clarification by joe_cot · · Score: 5, Informative

    As one of the people affected by this issue, I'd like to give some clarification on this. Firstly, the servers affected were Local Community (LoCo) Team servers, of which I maintain ubuntu-us.org While I'm personally annoyed that the site is down (given it was on the front page of Digg last week), these servers are far from "production" servers; they host LoCo team resources and websites. I'd like to know what "compromised" software would have been downloaded by users, given that these servers did not host user repositories, and for the most part hosted news pages, blogs, and localized documentation. The issues were twofold: the servers were not upgraded past breezy, leaving them open to vulnerabilities after Breezy's EOL; LoCo team users were running an array of web applications (Drupal, Wordpress, Mediawiki, etc), but not updating their systems with new security patches. Top that with ftp logins and no ssh keys, and you have yourself a problem. Canonical is moving the installs to their facilities, retrieving the data, and building the installs (including the aformentioned web applications) from scratch, assuming that everything has been compromised. Hopefully in the next few days this will all be over.

  4. It happens by popeydotcom · · Score: 4, Informative

    Firstly these servers were not "Canonical Hosted" as the anonymous readers suggests. They were hosted in a DC which Canonical paid for, but the community maintained them. So Canonical system admins had very little to do with them.

    My site - http://screencasts.ubuntu.com was one of them that was affected, so I was of course concerned that there might be some data loss. I only use SCP to copy files up to the site, and logon with my ssh key, so don't think that all Ubuntu community members are using FTP, weak passwords and really old software, it only takes _one_ though to naff it up for everyone else.

    The Canonical system admins (on top of the work they already do) migrated the services from those servers to their own DC very quickly. My site went down on Tuesday and was back by Friday. For free hosting and oodles of bandwidth, I'm happy with that downtime - for a community site.

  5. Re:how ironic by Super_Z · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you had bothered to read the originating mail ( https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/loco-contacts/20 07-August/001510.html ), you would have seen that these servers were hacked through unpatched 3rd party web-applications running on these servers - namely:

    art-web, gallery, drupal, phpmyadmin, wordpress, postnuke, phpbb,
    smf, moodle, planet, aspseek, moin, taskfreak, cms made simple,
    mediawiki, ...

    Your argument is whiny and offtopic.

  6. Re:I would like to read a report by houghi · · Score: 3, Informative

    That is why I use `rm directory -rf` instead of `rm -rf directory`. It saved me a few times already.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.