Slashdot Mirror


GoDaddy Wants Your Root Password

Johnny Fusion writes "The writer of the Securi Security Blog had an alarming awakening when a honeypot on port 22 on a GoDaddy-hosted VPS recorded login attempts using his GoDaddy username and password and even an attempt to login as root. It turns out the attempt was actually from within GoDaddy's network. Before he could 'alert' GoDaddy about the security breach, he got an email from GoDaddy Demanding his root login credentials. There is an update where GoDaddy explains itself and says they will change policy."

5 of 236 comments (clear)

  1. Feature, not a bug. by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When my trivia game was hosted at EV1Servers (now part of The Planet company) I kept my root password on file with them at all times, and quite a few times support logged in and helped me with a problem, like telling me the reason my webserver went down was that the Warnings file in Apache had hit the Linux system limit.

    This isn't GoDaddy the domain registrar looking for your passwords, this is GoDaddy the hosting provider wanting to log in to a customer's VPS that's running on their hardware, and most likely is calming down a paranoid admin if he's yelling at Slashdot about a "security breach" when support wanted to log in.

    Nothing to see here... move along.

    1. Re:Feature, not a bug. by batrick · · Score: 5, Interesting

      A VPS is rented space on hardware in the same way you rent an apartment. You don't own the hardware, but that doesn't mean the host can break into your box whenever he wants. Maybe the contract asserts they have that right (you would be an idiot to contract with them). Use Linode (arguably the best VPS provider in the industry): http://linode.com/ (I am not affiliated with Linode.)

    2. Re:Feature, not a bug. by mysidia · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Two things... (1) of course they can determine that after logging in with the credentials.

      (2) Godaddy is using fricking Virtuozzo as their VPS hosting platform right?

      They technically then don't NEED the root password at all if so.

      In theory, they could 'vzctl enter' a customer's VPS from the host node. To be clear: _entering_ a container, spawns a new shell child process with the customer's VZPID, such that the child shell is actually created inside the customer's VPS.

      Now there might be some reasons they wouldn't want to do this, or that they'd want to wrap that in additional layers.

      Well, the reason is entering a VPS from the host node potentially places the VPS they have entered in control of the user's terminal.

      That could in theory be a security risk to GoDaddy's own system.

      So by getting the VPS root password, they can enter the VPS over the network, instead of through the hardware node.... thus, not ensuring a VPS can never have control over a terminal logged into the hardware node.

      Basically, this is more sound security wise.

      Anyways... there definitely doesn't seem to be anything wrong with GoDaddy gaining access to a customer VPS on an official basis, for good reasons, to investigate possible customer abuse or malware.

      As long as they follow professional standards, respect customer privacy completely, do not conduct any abuses, such as stealing leaking info, or gratifying personal curiosities (IOW: no abuse whatsoever) -- basically everything you would expect from an admin of Gmail or Yahoo mail (as in not reading your e-mail and using it for personal uses, to satisfy curiosities, blackmail you, etc...).

      Oh yeah, and that they exclude any utilization they generate from the customers' bandwidth / resource bills.

  2. No Surprises Here by neoform · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not surprising at all.

    I had a domain with Godaddy a few years ago when they breached ICANN's rules by threatening to confiscate my domain unless I paid them $200, because I had supposedly breached their TOS.

    GoDaddy is not to be trusted.

    --
    MABASPLOOM!
    1. Re:No Surprises Here by neoform · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Someone (falsely) accused me of spamming.

      However, even *if* I was a spammer, what right does godaddy have to confiscate my domain? I didn't even have any hosting with them, I just had a domain registered. This is clearly against ICANN policy. Registrars are not arbiters who get to take your domain away because they feel like it.

      --
      MABASPLOOM!