- I would normally say that "That must be a coincidence", but I had a client account compromise as well. And it was very strange:
Client was a small org, and two very old IAM accounts had suddenly had recent (yesterday) console log ins and password changes.
I'm investigating the extent of the compromise, but so far it seems all they did was open a ticket to turn on SES production access and increase the daily email limit to 50k.
These were basically dormant IAM users from more than 5 years ago, and it's certainly odd timing that they'd suddenly pop on this particular day.
by CaptainOfCoit
3 subcomments
- Is it possible that people who already managed to get access (that they confirmed) has been waiting for any hiccups in AWS infrastructure in order to hide among the chaos when it happens? So maybe the access token was exposed weeks/months ago, but instead of going ahead directly, idle until there is something big going on.
Certainly feels like an strategy I'd explore if I was on that side of the aisle.
by sousastep
6 subcomments
- couple folks on reddit said while they were refreshing during the outage, they were briefly logged in as a whole different user
by whoknew1122
0 subcomment
- The AWS issue related to DNS entries. And IAM doesn't use Dynamo DB. It wasn't related, other than an outage gives a good way to obfuscate TTPs.
by ThreatSystems
3 subcomments
- Cloudtrail events should be able to demonstrate WHAT created the EC2s. Off the top of my head I think it's the runinstance event.
- If I were an attacker I would choose when to attack and a major disruption happening leaving your logging is in chaos seems like it could be a good time. Is it possible you had been compromised for a while and they took that moment to take advantage of it? Or, similarly, they took that moment to use your resources for a different attack that was spurred by the outage?
by defraudbah
1 subcomments
- weird, can you send me your API key so I can verify it's not in the list of compromised credentials?
- Highly likely to be coincidence. Typically an exposed access key. Exposed password for non-MFA protected console access happens but is less common.
- During time of panic, that’s when people are most vulnerable to phishing attacks.
Total password reset and tell your AWS representative. They usually let it slide on good faith.
- us-east-1 is unimaginably large. The last public info I saw said it had 159 datacenters. I wouldn't be surprised if many millions of accounts are primarily located there.
While this could possibly be related to the downtime, I think this is probably an unfortunate case of coincidence.
by itsnowandnever
1 subcomments
- i cant imagine it's related. if it is related, hello Bloomberg News or whoever will be reading this thread because that would be a catastrophic breach of customer trust that would likely never fully return
- If I was a burgler holding a stolen key to a house, waiting to pick a good day, a city-wide blackout would probably feel like a good day.
by WesleyJohnson
1 subcomments
- Our Alexa had a random person "drop in" yesterday. We could hear a child talking on the other end, but no idea who it was. It may just be a coincidence, but it's never happened before so it's easy to imagine it might be related to the AWS issues.
- Any chance you did something crazy while troubleshooting downtime (before you knew it was an AWS issue)? I've had to deal with a similar situation, and in my case, I was lazy and pushed a key to a public repo. (Not saying you are, just saying in my case it was a leaked API key)
- Lot of keys and passwords being panic entered on insecure laptops yesterday.
Do not discount the possibility of regular malware.
by AtNightWeCode
0 subcomment
- Not uncommon that machines get exposed during trouble-shooting. Just look at the Crowdstrike incident just the other year. People enabled RDP on a lot machines to "implement the fix" and now many of these machines are more vulnerable than if if they never installed that garbage security software in the first place.
by uoflcards22
1 subcomments
- https://www.reddit.com/r/webdev/comments/1obtbmg/aws_site_re...
by Traubenfuchs
0 subcomment
- It makes me very uncomfortable to know I got my CC in GCP, AWS and oracle cloud and that I have access to 3 corporate AWS accounts with bills on the level of 10's of millions per month.
Why don't cloud providers offer IP restrictions?
I can only access GitHub from my corporate account if I am in the VPN and it should be like that for every of those services with the capability to destroy lives.
by ohdeardear
0 subcomment
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by temptemptemp111
0 subcomment
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- Sounds like a coincidence to me
by mr_windfrog
0 subcomment
- Considering AWS’s position as the No.1 cloud provider worldwide, their operational standards are extremely high. If something like this happened right after an outage, coincidence is the most plausible explanation rather than incompetence.