• @stevedidwhat_infosec@infosec.pub
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    5 months ago

    For anyone interested - I’d you are using umatrix to block shit you can punch these lines into a new text file and import as blocklist, then commit it with the tiny arrow that points left toward the permanent list to save it permanently:

    * www[.]googie-anaiytics[.]com * block

    * kuurza[.]com * block

    * cdn[.]polyfill[.]io * block

    * polyfill[.]io * block

    * bootcss[.]com * block

    * bootcdn[.]net * block

    * staticfile[.]org * block

    * polyfill[.]com * block

    * staticfile[.]net * block

    * unionadjs[.]com * block

    * xhsbpza[.]com * block

    * union[.]macoms[.]la * block

    * newcrbpc[.]com * block

    Remove the square brackets before saving the file - these are here to prevent hyperlinks and misclicks.

    Edit: this is not a bulleted list, every line must start with an asterisk, just in case your instance doesn’t update edits made to comments quickly.

    Edit2: added new IOCs

    Edit3: MOAR IOCS FOR THE HOARDE

    • Intuit uses pollyfill… and a lot of people use that service.

      Cloudflare and fastly wouldn’t be setting up mirrors if it weren’t still being used, I can guarantee that.

    • This has almost nothing to do with what you’re talking about.

      A Chinese company bought the domain and the service in February and are attacking people in highly specific conditions. (Mobile devices at specific times)

      This is an attack. Not negligence, not an uh oh oopsie woopsie fucky wucky. Attack.

      • lad
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        85 months ago

        I understood the original comment as “if devs were paid they wouldn’t sell out”. Which is probably valid, more or less

        • … he made plenty off the product and made additional when he sold. Devs ability to make money has nothing to do with companies coming in and injecting malware to the service.

          Any threat actor group with sufficient funds from various campaigns, spyware, etc could use said funds to buy out a dev, owner, etc.

          Not to mention state-sponsored threat actors. This is the perfect example of distracting from the fact of what happened.

          • @onlinepersona@programming.dev
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            -15 months ago

            You don’t believe that income (or lack thereof) can motivate the sale of a popular library to a shady party?

            Any threat actor group with sufficient funds from various campaigns, spyware, etc could use said funds to buy out a dev, owner, etc.

            I don’t see VLC being bought out.

            This is the perfect example of distracting from the fact of what happened.

            If you say so… this isn’t the first time an underpaid opensource dev sold their project only for it to end up being used for ads or malware.

            Anti Commercial-AI license

            • @stevedidwhat_infosec@infosec.pub
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              5 months ago

              Not at all what I meant. The premise was that this wouldn’t happen if they were being paid fairly. Supply chain attacks happen with or without fair pay.

              Look at what happened with the XZ backdoor. Whether or not they’re getting paid just means a different door is opened.

              The root of the problem is that we blindly trust anyone based on name-brand and popularity. That has never in the existence of technology been a reliable nor an effective means of authentication.

              If it’s not outright buying out companies it will be vulnerabilities/lack of appropriate management, if it’s not vulns it’ll be insider threat.

              These are problems we’ve known about for at least a decade+ and we’ve done fuck all to address the root of the problem.

              Never trust, always verify. Simple as that.