[H-GEN] CERT Advisory CA-2003-21 GNU Project FTP Server Compromise (fwd)
Bruce Campbell
bc at humbug.org.au
Thu Aug 14 04:28:11 EDT 2003
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This is rather awkward news. On the one hand, it was noticed by the
machine maintainers, and many people who rely on GNU software
(particularly if you've built anything since March 2003) can go back and
recheck/rebuild their code.
On another hand, the number of people who use GNU software (knowingly or
unknowningly) is rather large, and hence the ripple effect (eg, security
advisories in various free Unix distributions) may serve only to spread
FUD around.
On the gripping hand, this can only play into the courts of MS, SCO (etc)
who are claiming that open software is bad/theirs/etc.
--==--
Bruce.
Of course, this is only my copy. If you are paranoid, you'd be checking
the CERT sites now.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 13 Aug 2003 17:49:34 -0400
From: CERT Advisory <cert-advisory at cert.org>
To: cert-advisory at cert.org
Subject: CERT Advisory CA-2003-21 GNU Project FTP Server Compromise
CERT Advisory CA-2003-21 GNU Project FTP Server Compromise
Original issue date: August 13, 2003
Last revised: --
Source: CERT/CC
A complete revision history is at the end of this file.
Overview
The CERT/CC has received a report that the system housing the primary
FTP servers for the GNU software project was compromised.
I. Description
The GNU Project, principally sponsored by the Free Software Foundation
(FSF), produces a variety of freely available software. The CERT/CC
has learned that the system housing the primary FTP servers for the
GNU software project, gnuftp.gnu.org, was root compromised by an
intruder. The more common host names of ftp.gnu.org and alpha.gnu.org
are aliases for the same compromised system. The compromise is
reported to have occurred in March of 2003.
The FSF has released an announcement describing the incident.
Because this system serves as a centralized archive of popular
software, the insertion of malicious code into the distributed
software is a serious threat. As the above announcement indicates,
however, no source code distributions are believed to have been
maliciously modified at this time.
II. Impact
The potential exists for an intruder to have inserted back doors,
Trojan horses, or other malicious code into the source code
distributions of software housed on the compromised system.
III. Solution
We encourage sites using the GNU software obtained from the
compromised system to verify the integrity of their distribution.
Sites that mirror the source code are encouraged to verify the
integrity of their sources. We also encourage users to inspect any and
all other software that may have been downloaded from the compromised
site. Note that it is not always sufficient to rely on the timestamps
or file sizes when trying to determine whether or not a copy of the
file has been modified.
Verifying checksums
The FSF has produced PGP-signed lists of known-good MD5 hashes of the
software packages housed on the compromised server. These lists can be
found at
ftp://ftp.gnu.org/before-2003-08-01.md5sums.asc
ftp://alpha.gnu.org/before-2003-08-01.md5sums.asc
Note that both of these files and the announcement above are signed by
Bradley Kuhn, Executive Director of the FSF, with the following PGP
key:
pub 1024D/DB41B387 1999-12-09 Bradley M. Kuhn <bkuhn at fsf.org>
Key fingerprint = 4F40 645E 46BE 0131 48F9 92F6 E775 E324 DB41 B387
uid Bradley M. Kuhn (bkuhn99) <bkuhn at ebb.org>
uid Bradley M. Kuhn <bkuhn at gnu.org>
sub 2048g/75CA9CB3 1999-12-09
The CERT/CC believes this key to be valid.
As a matter of good security practice, the CERT/CC encourages users to
verify, whenever possible, the integrity of downloaded software. For
more information, see IN-2001-06.
Appendix A. - Vendor Information
This appendix contains information provided by vendors for this
advisory. As vendors report new information to the CERT/CC, we will
update this section and note the changes in our revision history. If a
particular vendor is not listed below, we have not received their
comments.
Free Software Foundation
The current files on alpha.gnu.org and ftp.gnu.org as of 2003-08-02 have
all been verified, and their md5sums and the reasons we believe the
md5sums can be trusted are in:
ftp://ftp.gnu.org/before-2003-08-01.md5sums.asc
ftp://alpha.gnu.org/before-2003-08-01.md5sums.asc
We are updating that file and the site as we confirm good md5sums of
additional files. It is theoretically possible that downloads between
March 2003 and July 2003 might have been source-compromised, so we
encourage everyone to re-download sources and compare with the current
copies for files on the site.
Appendix B. References
* FSF announcement regarding the incident -
ftp://ftp.gnu.org/MISSING-FILES.README
* CERT Incident Note IN-2001-06 -
http://www.cert.org/incident_notes/IN-2001-06.html
_________________________________________________________________
The CERT/CC thanks Bradley Kuhn and Brett Smith of the Free Software
Foundation for their timely assistance in this matter.
_________________________________________________________________
Feedback can be directed to the author: Chad Dougherty.
______________________________________________________________________
This document is available from:
http://www.cert.org/advisories/CA-2003-21.html
______________________________________________________________________
CERT/CC Contact Information
Email: cert at cert.org
Phone: +1 412-268-7090 (24-hour hotline)
Fax: +1 412-268-6989
Postal address:
CERT Coordination Center
Software Engineering Institute
Carnegie Mellon University
Pittsburgh PA 15213-3890
U.S.A.
CERT/CC personnel answer the hotline 08:00-17:00 EST(GMT-5) /
EDT(GMT-4) Monday through Friday; they are on call for emergencies
during other hours, on U.S. holidays, and on weekends.
Using encryption
We strongly urge you to encrypt sensitive information sent by email.
Our public PGP key is available from
http://www.cert.org/CERT_PGP.key
If you prefer to use DES, please call the CERT hotline for more
information.
Getting security information
CERT publications and other security information are available from
our web site
http://www.cert.org/
To subscribe to the CERT mailing list for advisories and bulletins,
send email to majordomo at cert.org. Please include in the body of your
message
subscribe cert-advisory
* "CERT" and "CERT Coordination Center" are registered in the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office.
______________________________________________________________________
NO WARRANTY
Any material furnished by Carnegie Mellon University and the Software
Engineering Institute is furnished on an "as is" basis. Carnegie
Mellon University makes no warranties of any kind, either expressed or
implied as to any matter including, but not limited to, warranty of
fitness for a particular purpose or merchantability, exclusivity or
results obtained from use of the material. Carnegie Mellon University
does not make any warranty of any kind with respect to freedom from
patent, trademark, or copyright infringement.
______________________________________________________________________
Conditions for use, disclaimers, and sponsorship information
Copyright 2002 Carnegie Mellon University.
Revision History
August 13, 2003: Initial release
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