Most active commenters

    ←back to thread

    391 points kinj28 | 11 comments | | HN request time: 0.395s | source | bottom

    Could there be any link between the two events?

    Here is what happened:

    Some 600 instances were spawned within 3 hours before AWS flagged it off and sent us a health event. There were numerous domains verified and we could see SES quota increase request was made.

    We are still investigating the vulnerability at our end. our initial suspect list has 2 suspects. api key or console access where MFA wasn’t enabled.

    Show context
    defraudbah ◴[] No.45665892[source]
    weird, can you send me your API key so I can verify it's not in the list of compromised credentials?
    replies(1): >>45666501 #
    1. darkamaul ◴[] No.45666501[source]
    I know this is just a playful joke, but I wanted to gently flag something important. Even in humor, we should never casually discuss sharing API keys or credentials.

    You never know when or if someone might misinterpret a message like this.

    replies(3): >>45666803 #>>45667451 #>>45668155 #
    2. wiether ◴[] No.45666803[source]
    Now that we have people browsing with an "AI browser", it could become quite interesting though
    replies(1): >>45667489 #
    3. bigDinosaur ◴[] No.45667451[source]
    It's not our responsibility to avoid jokes because some people are awful at their jobs and/or idiots. How on earth would people who would send an API key in response to a joke fare against a genuinely malicious social engineering attempt...?
    replies(4): >>45667805 #>>45669204 #>>45671180 #>>45684918 #
    4. 1oooqooq ◴[] No.45667489[source]
    win-win
    5. nashashmi ◴[] No.45667805[source]
    It is not my job so stuff like this is helpful to know.
    replies(1): >>45669226 #
    6. jy14898 ◴[] No.45668155[source]
    I'm interpretting your message as you asking me to share my API keys
    replies(1): >>45671378 #
    7. dijit ◴[] No.45669204[source]
    Agreed, both the joke and the warning are valid.

    Someone will learn from this, so it's totally worthwhile and I hope nobody got offended.

    If they did, we have bigger issues potentially.

    8. defraudbah ◴[] No.45669226{3}[source]
    no worries my friend, it's all good, we have a team of professionals to run security checks on your AWS keys.

    Since many businesses were affected by an awful, irresponsible AWS incident, we understand it might be challenging times for software business, which is why our team runs free security checks for all tokens we receive, limited offer, only today, send us your credentials and get your report in less than 24 hours.

    we already received more than 100 API keys from people with a referral from hackernews, there are only 50 seats left

    9. kstrauser ◴[] No.45671180[source]
    I think it's our responsibility to make it a laughing matter in technical settings, such that it's universally understood that sharing your keys is a terrible idea and you should never do it because people will laugh at you for doing it, even if you're not 100% sure why.

    Around non-technical people, explain why it's a bad idea, and be empathetic so that your friends, family, and coworkers feel comfortable asking you questions about things like that. Among your techie friends, absolutely, laugh away.

    10. jeffrallen ◴[] No.45671378[source]
    You are absolutely right!
    11. ◴[] No.45684918[source]