this post was submitted on 29 Mar 2024
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You are an idiot. It's not blind. That's how it was found.
Not having world accessible SSH is the real fix here.
From the article...
The fact that it was discovered early due to bad actor sloppiness does not imply that it could not have also been caught prior to wide spread usage via security audits that take place for many enterprise grade Linux distributions.
I think it does though. They call it sloppy, I call it sophisticated. Same reason they major distro is running checking shit out right now.
Opensource = fast detection
Opensource + sloppiness = faster detection
Closedsource = never detected
Closedsource + sloppiness = maybe detected
You can put the pom-poms/rifle down, I'm not attacking open source, not in the slightest. I'm a big believer open source.
But I also know that volunteer work is not always as rigorous as when paid for work is being done.
The only point I'm trying to make in this conversation is getting confirmation if security audits are actually done, or if everyone just thinks they're done because of "Open Source" reasons.
Yeah I nearly panicked for a second there, then I remember noone's getting near that anyway. Back to my relaxing weekend.
Not really. The most important admin interfaces are the ones you can't lock behind an IP whitelists.
"whitelists good IPs" - OK but what if I need to manage the "good ip" infra, etc