On 06/09/2018 03:27 AM, Andrew Gierth wrote:
"Thomas" == Thomas Kellerer writes:
Thomas> And a blog post going into details on how that specific attack works.
Thomas>
https://www.imperva.com/blog/2018/03/deep-dive-database-attacks-scarlett-johanssons-picture-used-for-crypto-mining-on-p
> "Thomas" == Thomas Kellerer writes:
Thomas> And a blog post going into details on how that specific attack works.
Thomas>
https://www.imperva.com/blog/2018/03/deep-dive-database-attacks-scarlett-johanssons-picture-used-for-crypto-mining-on-postgre-database/
*headdesk*
*headdesk*
*hea
> Please cite actual instances of such reports. Vague queries like this help
nobody.
There were several questions on SO
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49815460
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47499766
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47741077
https://dba.stackexchange.com/questions/1
On 06/08/2018 06:13 PM, Andrew Gierth wrote:
"Tom" == Tom Lane writes:
> Andrew Dunstan writes:
>> Please cite actual instances of such reports. Vague queries like
>> this help nobody.
We do also get them on the IRC channel every once in a while, not
very frequently but enough to not
> "Tom" == Tom Lane writes:
> Andrew Dunstan writes:
>> Please cite actual instances of such reports. Vague queries like
>> this help nobody.
We do also get them on the IRC channel every once in a while, not
very frequently but enough to notice (maybe 2-3 so far this year?).
Tom> Unles
On 06/08/2018 04:54 PM, Steve Atkins wrote:
On Jun 8, 2018, at 1:47 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
Andrew Dunstan writes:
On 06/08/2018 04:34 PM, Steve Atkins wrote:
I've noticed a steady trickle of reports of postgresql servers being
compromised via being left available to the internet with insecu
> On Jun 8, 2018, at 1:47 PM, Tom Lane wrote:
>
> Andrew Dunstan writes:
>> On 06/08/2018 04:34 PM, Steve Atkins wrote:
>>> I've noticed a steady trickle of reports of postgresql servers being
>>> compromised via being left available to the internet with insecure or
>>> default configuration
Andrew Dunstan writes:
> On 06/08/2018 04:34 PM, Steve Atkins wrote:
>> I've noticed a steady trickle of reports of postgresql servers being
>> compromised via being left available to the internet with insecure or
>> default configuration, or brute-forced credentials. The symptoms are
>> random
On 06/08/2018 04:34 PM, Steve Atkins wrote:
I've noticed a steady trickle of reports of postgresql servers being
compromised via being left available to the internet with insecure or default
configuration, or brute-forced credentials. The symptoms are randomly named
binaries being uploaded
I've noticed a steady trickle of reports of postgresql servers being
compromised via being left available to the internet with insecure or default
configuration, or brute-forced credentials. The symptoms are randomly named
binaries being uploaded to the data directory and executed with the permi
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