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B3NKobe
July 16th, 2005, 01:02 AM
The Mozilla Foundation marketing site SpreadFirefox.com (http://www.spreadfirefox.com/), which is designed to promote adoption of Firefox, was hacked over the weekend, officials said in an e-mail sent to users on Friday. Attackers exploited a security vulnerability and potentially accessed personal information of the site's registered users.The breach was not discovered until July 12, and the Web site was subsequently taken offline. Mozilla Foundation officials believe the compromised server was only used to send spam, but opted to err on the side of caution and contact users.

"It doesn't look like the attacker accessed any personal data on the site, but to be safe, we're encouraging all of our users to log in and change their passwords," read a notice (http://www.spreadfirefox.com/?q=node/view/16836) posted by Mozilla engineer Asa Dotzler. "If you have an account with Spread Firefox, you probably received an email about this with instructions for updating your password."

Information provided by Spread Firefox users and stored on the server include a real name, a URL, an email address, IM names, a street address, a birthday, and private messages to other users.

News of the hack is a black eye for Mozilla, which prides itself on security when compared to Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser.

"The Mozilla Foundation deeply regrets this incident and is taking steps to prevent it from happening again. We have applied the necessary security fixes to the software running the site, have reviewed our security plan to determine why we didn't previously apply those fixes in this case, and have modified that plan to ensure we do so in the future."

The Foundation said in its e-mail that only SpreadFirefox.com was affected and not any other Mozilla owned site, including the mozilla.org server that serves Firefox downloads.

Source: BetaNews (http://www.betanews.com/article/Spread_Firefox_Site_Hacked_Data_Leaked/1121448513)

McGuffin
July 16th, 2005, 01:06 AM
" News of the hack is a black eye for Mozilla, which prides itself on security when compared to Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser."

I fail to see how a server vulnerability has anything to do with the security measures in their software.

GW02
July 16th, 2005, 01:31 AM
I fail to see that connection as well.

Vexir
July 16th, 2005, 02:37 AM
:lol: Omg I was just going to point that out when I scrolled down to see the responses :P

booler
July 16th, 2005, 04:19 AM
well it will be mis interpereted by lesser users out there as a ff vulnerability thats how it will get the "black eye"... that and everyone knows how the media likes to distort teh truth

andr.in
July 16th, 2005, 04:58 AM
heh I got the e-mail to change my pw... and yes it's makes me pretty angry to see that they think a browser's security hole can be exploited to hack into a site. :P
(hehe... remember the File->Save As hacking technique? Guess what level these guys are on :hugegrin: )

Krilnon
July 17th, 2005, 08:38 PM
I recommend that you don't read through the 63 or so comments, it's depressing. :P

NoirWD
July 19th, 2005, 03:08 AM
Man, I love FF, but I didn't know this site existed --> spreadfirefox.com, I'm joining right now.
And yeah, that security comment is pretty dumb. Oh well.

Noir.

eyezberg
July 19th, 2005, 10:47 AM
It's not dumb.
How much trust will someone who's private details have been retrieved by a hacker from a Moz site have in their software?
If you can't secure your servers/user details, how am I sure you can secure your software..?

SlowRoasted
July 19th, 2005, 11:27 AM
im still going to use ff. It's not that big of a deal in my mind.

NoirWD
July 19th, 2005, 01:38 PM
Its not completely dumb, but server security and browser security is different.
And the main reason FF is secure is because it is not part of the windows infratructure, like IE is.
How they might have hacked into spreadfirefox.com, could've been a method that doesn't even involve a browser.

Seb Hughes
July 19th, 2005, 04:39 PM
Its not completely dumb, but server security and browser security is different.
And the main reason FF is secure is because it is not part of the windows infratructure, like IE is.
How they might have hacked into spreadfirefox.com, could've been a method that doesn't even involve a browser.

Think how kirupa was hacked and got all those thread deleted, that was throught flash

ahmed
July 19th, 2005, 04:40 PM
:lol: Omg I was just going to point that out when I scrolled down to see the responses :Pomg same thing :lol:

NoirWD
July 19th, 2005, 05:58 PM
Think how kirupa was hacked and got all those thread deleted, that was throught flash

Exactly :thumb: