Linux distributor Red Hat has issued a
critical
security update after its servers were hacked last week.
The organisation has
acknowledged
the attack, and
one
on the Fedora servers as well. It says that it is investigating to see if
data was stolen or malware introduced to its systems.
“In connection with the incident, the intruder was able to get a small number
of OpenSSH packages relating only to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 (i386 and x86_64
architectures only) and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 (x86_64 architecture only)
signed.
“As a precautionary measure, we are releasing an updated version of these
packages and have published a list of the tampered packages and how to detect
them. To reiterate, our processes and efforts to date indicate that packages
obtained by Red Hat Enterprise Linux subscribers via Red Hat Network are not at
risk.”
It seems the hacker or hackers were more intent on getting software signed
off than infiltrating Red Hat’s deployment system, which may have allowed them
to insert malware into all future deployments if undetected.
The Fedora hack seems more serious, and the organisation has called on system
administrators to update their system with new keys.
“While there is no definitive evidence that the Fedora key has been
compromised, because Fedora packages are distributed via multiple third-party
mirrors and repositories, we have decided to convert to new Fedora signing
keys,” it said
“This may require affirmative steps from every Fedora system owner or
administrator.”
Red Hat has not disclosed the specific vulnerability that allowed the
intrusion onto its systems.
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