Ubuntu Linux Forums Hacked -- IP Address, Username, Email of 2M Accounts Compromised (betanews.com)
Canonical announced on Friday that Ubuntu forums have been hacked. The company adds that data such as IP address, username, and email address of over two million users have been compromised. BetaNews reports: Keep in mind, this does not mean that the operating system has experienced a vulnerability or weakness. The only thing affected are the online forums that people use to discuss the OS. Still, such a hack is embarrassing as it happened due to Canonical's failure to install a patch.In a blog post, Jane Silber, Chief Executive Officer, Canonical said, "after some initial investigation, we were able to confirm there had been an exposure of data and shut down the Forums as a precautionary measure. Deeper investigation revealed that there was a known SQL injection vulnerability in the Forumrunner add-on in the Forums which had not yet been patched."
The vulnerability was an SQL injection. The operating system had nothing to do with it.
Yeah, if that level of granularity was used every time there was a security vulnerability related to software that runs on Windows then it might be relevant.
Not to mention the fact that Ubuntu isn't linux: It's a linux distribution that expressly provides an entire software stack, including the software that got hacked here.
Don't be obtuse. "Linux" is most commonly used to refer to the complete server or desktop environment. When Linux fans are championing and encouraging people to switch their server or desktop to Linux they are referring to the entire environment not merely the kernel. Just as when Windows gets hacked and its something in the "software stack" and not the kernel itself, often something from a 3rd party not Microsoft. Matter of fact when the only "Linux" thing in an environment is the Linux kernel we tend not to call it "Linux" at all, for example Android. So don't start with this "Linux" only refers to the kernel nonsense, that is not how the word is used, and that includes within the Linux community.
Ubuntu is an ancient african word meaning "I couldn't figure out how install Debian."
I know it's old, but that's one of my favorite jokes.