A large number of servers running the Kubernetes API have been left exposed to the internet, which is not great: they're potentially vulnerable to abuse. . Nonprofit security organization The Shadowserver Foundation recently scanned 454,729 systems hosting the popular open-source platform for managing and orchestrating containers, finding that more than 381,645 – or about 84 percent – are accessible via the internet to varying degrees thus providing a cracked door into a corporate network. "While this does not mean that these instances are fully open or vulnerable to an attack, it is likely that this level of access was not intended and these instances are an unnecessarily exposed attack surface," Shadowserver's team stressed in a write-up . "They also allow for information leakage on version and build." . The Cyber Defense Coalition analyzed 512,310 devices, uncovering unprotected Docker Hub repositories.. Kubernetes Api Exposure, Shadowserver Scanning, Network Vulnerabilities. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Nicholas Albright's first foray into some of the darkest alleys of the Internet came in November 2004, shortly after his father committed suicide. About a month following his father's death, Albright discovered that online criminals had broken into his dad's personal computer and programmed it to serve as part of a worldwide, distributed network for storing pirated software and movies. . Albright managed to get the network shuttered with a call to the company providing the Internet access the criminals were using to control it. From that day forward, Albright poured all of his free time and pent-up anger over his father's death into assembling "Shadowserver," a group of individuals dedicated to battling large, remote-controlled herds of hacked personal PCs, also known as "botnets." The link for this article located at TechNews is no longer available. . After a devastating botnet attack affected his family, Nicholas Albright became resolute in fighting against cybercrime, transforming personal loss into a mission for change. Botnet Management, Shadowserver, Nicholas Albright, Cyber Crime, Cybersecurity Insight. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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