DREAMHOST account owners: change your passwords!

SpyderGST

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Jun 12, 2005
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http://www.caydel.com/dreamhost-leaks-3500-ftp-passwords/

From the article:

I just recieved this email from Dreamhost. It seems that they’ve leaked 3500 FTP account passwords somehow.

That explains a lot - about 2 weeks ago, someone used my password to upload tons of spam links to my sites. At the time, I contacted Dreamhost indicating the problem, and they assured me that their servers were secure, and it *must* be my problem. Looks like it wan’t me.

From: DreamHost Security Team
Subject: URGENT: FTP Account Security Concerns…

Hello -

This email is regarding a potential security concern related to your
‘XXXX’ FTP account.

We have detected what appears to be the exploit of a number of
accounts belonging to DreamHost customers, and it appears that your
account was one of those affected.

We’re still working to determine how this occurred, but it appears
that a 3rd party found a way to obtain the password information
associated with approximately 3,500 separate FTP accounts and has
used that information to append data to the index files of customer
sites using automated scripts (primarily for search engine
optimization purposes).

Our records indicate that only roughly 20% of the accounts accessed -
less than 0.15% of the total accounts that we host - actually had
any changes made to them. Most accounts were untouched.

We ask that you do the following as soon as possible:

1. Immediately change your FTP password, as well as that of any other
accounts that may share the same password. We recommend the use of
passwords containing 8 or more random letters and numbers. You may
change your FTP password from the web panel (”Users” section, “Manage
Users” sub-section).

2. Review your hosted accounts/sites and ensure that nothing has been
uploaded or changed that you did not do yourself. Many of the
unauthorized logins did not result in changes at all (the intruder
logged in, obtained a directory listing and quickly logged back out)
but to be sure you should carefully review the full contents of your
account.

Again, only about 20% of the exploited accounts showed any
modifications, and of those the only known changes have been to site
index documents (ie. ‘index.php’, ‘index.html’, etc - though we
recommend looking for other changes as well).

It appears that the same intruder also attempted to gain direct
access to our internal customer information database, but this was
thwarted by protections we have in place to prevent such access.
Similarly, we have seen no indication that the intruder accessed
other customer account services such as email or MySQL databases.

In the last 24 hours we have made numerous significant behind-the-
scenes changes to improve internal security, including the discovery
and patching to prevent a handful of possible exploits.

We will, of course, continue to investigate the source of this
particular security breach and keep customers apprised of what we
find. Once we learn more, we will be sure to post updates as they
become available to our status weblog:

http://www.dreamhoststatus.com/

Thank you for your patience. If you have any questions or concerns,
please let us know.
 
3,500 ftp user accounts. was done over a week ago. those with affected accounts have already been e-mailed. shit happens. this isn't the end of the world. nor are they an incredibly insecure host. unlike that really bad 0day exploit for cpanel that really hosed hostgator and other hosts that used cpanel.

neither of my two accounts were affected. who cares anyway. dreamhost has backups. change your password. restore backups. profit++
 
now if i could just remember my password...

and i always found it funny that less than a week after changing my hosting to them, Tish and I started getting over 100 spam mail a day... each.

Guess its better than the trojan that kept magically appearing on the old host.
 
#
Simon Jessey @ June 6th, 2007

The title of your post is inaccurate. Exactly how these FTP accounts were compromised has yet to be determined. It is possible that all 3,500 of us were just careless!
:lol:
 
The larger the web host, the bigger target you become for the spammers. Sad to say, but that's how they operate. I can't imagine how many probes and connections to their mail servers they get.

That said, you can turn on the spam filters they offer. However, I found them to be a little to aggressive for my tastes, so I turned it off. I just use Trendmicro Anti-Spam free plugin for Outlook to sift through my e-mail. The spam filter built into Outlook 2007 is suprisingly good though. It doesn't miss much.
 
The larger the web host, the bigger target you become for the spammers. Sad to say, but that's how they operate. I can't imagine how many probes and connections to their mail servers they get.

That said, you can turn on the spam filters they offer. However, I found them to be a little to aggressive for my tastes, so I turned it off. I just use Trendmicro Anti-Spam free plugin for Outlook to sift through my e-mail. The spam filter built into Outlook 2007 is suprisingly good though. It doesn't miss much.

im still running outlook 2003. i'll look into the trend micro thing. I turned off the spam filter with dreamhost because it was blocking a lot of legitimate email.