In regards to that SQL DDoS story - 11/24/01 06:28 AM
I posted the following to their messageboard after reading that "wonderful" (*cough*, *cough*) article:
Umm, I wish the person quoted would have actually installed SQL 2K server, as it DOES ask for an Admin password during installation. And, while you can leave the password blank, it gives a warning that it isn't such a hot idea. This sounds a lot like the Red Hat vulnerability from a while ago, where they had a default admin password left from installation that allowed hackers to access their systems. But boy, nobody remembers that, now do they?
Oh, and anybody would half a brain would at least have either the ports blocked in a firewall, or use some sort of authentication protocol (like IPSec) amongst the replicating servers and server/admin console systems. Duh.
If you are dumb enough to install a major application like that with a KNOWN issue as the sa/blank password account, AND leave the port open to it from the outside, then you deserve to get hacked. The wonderful world of w4rez is giving high-powered applications and operating systems to people that have had no training in such, and these systems wind up hosting a ton of bots due to poor administration. Oh yeah, and there are a bunch of PAID admins that screw things like this up too.
Quote:
Umm, I wish the person quoted would have actually installed SQL 2K server, as it DOES ask for an Admin password during installation. And, while you can leave the password blank, it gives a warning that it isn't such a hot idea. This sounds a lot like the Red Hat vulnerability from a while ago, where they had a default admin password left from installation that allowed hackers to access their systems. But boy, nobody remembers that, now do they?
Oh, and anybody would half a brain would at least have either the ports blocked in a firewall, or use some sort of authentication protocol (like IPSec) amongst the replicating servers and server/admin console systems. Duh.
If you are dumb enough to install a major application like that with a KNOWN issue as the sa/blank password account, AND leave the port open to it from the outside, then you deserve to get hacked. The wonderful world of w4rez is giving high-powered applications and operating systems to people that have had no training in such, and these systems wind up hosting a ton of bots due to poor administration. Oh yeah, and there are a bunch of PAID admins that screw things like this up too.