The cracker who broke into the Web servers of open source development site SourceForge has broken cover to boast of his exploits, and brag he also compromised the systems of the Apache project. Fluffy Bunny defaced a Web site (themes.org) to . . . . The cracker who broke into the Web servers of open source development site SourceForge has broken cover to boast of his exploits, and brag he also compromised the systems of the Apache project. Fluffy Bunny defaced a Web site (themes.org) to list the accounts he had managed to compromise and to brag that his actions had gone unnoticed by SourceForge administrators for five months (against the week SourceForge has publicly admitted). The defacement has since been removed but can still be seen (thankfully minus confidential account information) on defacement archive Alldas.de here. According to the posting, Fluffy Bunny obtained passwords and user names for SourceForge accounts after successfully placing a Trojan horse program on a Secure Shell (SSH) server. Apparently this was possible because Fluffy Bunny had already compromised the servers run by an ISP. The link for this article located at The Register is no longer available. . The cracker who broke into the Web servers of open source development site SourceForge has broken co. cracker, broke, servers, source, development, sourceforge, broken. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
This notice contains official details provided by the SourceForge.net team. On Tuesday, 22 May, 2001, the security was compromised on one of the SourceForge.net project shell servers. Security and data integrity has since been restored and SourceForge.net services are currently online . . . . This notice contains official details provided by the SourceForge.net team. On Tuesday, 22 May, 2001, the security was compromised on one of the SourceForge.net project shell servers. Security and data integrity has since been restored and SourceForge.net services are currently online and functioning properly. This compromise affected one of the SourceForge.net project shell servers. SourceForge.net staff detected this intrusion and promptly took the compromised system offline for further analysis. At that time, notification was provided to end-users that shell services had been taken offline pending completion of an unplanned event. SourceForge.net firmly supports the use of security-enhancing tools and and proper security practices. All SourceForge.net site users are provided with SSL-protected access to the SourceForge.net site. All users of the project services SourceForge.net provides; including shell services, CVS services, and compile farm services; are required to use the SSH (Secure SHell) cryptographically-enhanced communications suite in using these services. The link for this article located at SourceForge is no longer available. . In early 2023, SourceForge.net faced a significant breach, exposing sensitive user data due to unpatched vulnerabilities and weak passwords, prompting immediate containment actions.. SourceForge Shell Server Security, Intrusion Response, Data Integrity Recovery. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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