Tag Archive for: GitHub

DDoS attacks that crippled GitHub linked to Great Firewall of China

Earlier this week came word that the massive denial-of-service attacks targeting code-sharing site GitHub were the work of hackers with control over China’s Internet backbone. Now, a security researcher has provided even harder proof that the Chinese government is the source of the assaults.

In Tuesday’s story, Ars explained that the computers pummeling GitHub pages all ran a piece of JavaScript that surreptitiously made them soldiers in a massive DDoS army. The JavaScript was silently injected into the traffic of sites that use an analytics service that China-based search engine Baidu makes available so website operators can track visitor statistics. When everyday Internet users visited a site using the Baidu-supplied tracker, the injected code caused their browsers to constantly load two GitHub pages, one a mirror of anti-censorship site GreatFire.org the other a copy of the China edition of The New York Times.

Besides the motive of taking out pages the Chinese government doesn’t want its citizens to see, there was technical evidence supporting the theory the attack had the support of China’s leaders. To wit, the packets transmitting the malicious JavaScript had vastly different TTL, or time to live limits, from 30 to 229 compared with 42 for legitimate analytics code. This technical detail all but proved the DDoS code was coming from a sources inside China other than the visited website.

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

11 open source security tools catching fire on GitHub

11 open source security tools catching fire on GitHub
11 open source security tools catching fire on GitHub

The famous tenet “all bugs are shallow” is a cornerstone of open source development. Known as Linus’s Law, the idea that open code leads to more effective bug detection in one’s projects is often the first thing IT pros think of when it comes to the security upside of the open source model. 

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Network World Security

GitHub puts founder on leave, kicks wife out of office after harassment claim

GitHub’s staff.
GitHub

GitHub has placed one of its three cofounders on leave and barred the cofounder’s wife from the office while it investigates allegations made by a former employee.

Engineer Julie Ann Horvath announced this past weekend that she had left GitHub, describing a toxic office culture in an e-mail interview with TechCrunch. The wife of the cofounder played a prominent role in Horvath’s account.

Julie Ann Horvath.

“I met her and almost immediately the conversation that I thought was supposed to be casual turned into something very inappropriate,” Horvath told TechCrunch. “She began telling me about how she informs her husband’s decision-making at GitHub, how I better not leave GitHub and write something bad about them, and how she had been told by her husband that she should intervene with my relationship to be sure I was ‘made very happy’ so that I wouldn’t quit and say something nasty about her husband’s company because ‘he had worked so hard.’”

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab

LG TVs grab data, GitHub attacked, vBulletin breached – 60 Sec Security [VIDEO]

How honest is your TV? Why do crooks like source code hacks? Should you brag when you publish a breach notification? Find out now in 60 Second Security.
Naked Security – Sophos