chiragsangani
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Today, when I looked at my file manager, I noticed a curious file named "uN.txt". Curious, because I don't recall putting it there. The last modified date is May 10, and I know I didn't do anything to my website on the 10th of May.
The contents of the file are:
whisvodown
it's for fun-not important.
You can check out the file here: http://www.chiragsangani.com/uN.txt
A search on whisvodown revealed a number of zone-h entries on websites hacked by whisvodown. Clearly, someone broke into my account.
Now, did they figure out my password? Very unlikely, since my password is a random string of lower, upper case characters, numbers and special characters. Maybe they got it from another website they hacked into which shares the same password (not many). I think this is unlikely, since it requires the hacker to specifically focus on me, which is not what this looks like. I think someone found a vulnerability in your web hosting stack and exploited it en-masse.
I tried searching for a list of recent login events to my account on cPanel. There wasn't anything there. This was disappointing - you should be providing a list of recent login attempts and events.
I'm highly concerned about this, and would like to receive information on how this was possible, a log of login events for my account with IP addresses and time stamps, and what steps you are going to take to fix it (including a list of vulnerabilities you found).
I look forward to your response.
Chirag
The contents of the file are:
whisvodown
it's for fun-not important.
You can check out the file here: http://www.chiragsangani.com/uN.txt
A search on whisvodown revealed a number of zone-h entries on websites hacked by whisvodown. Clearly, someone broke into my account.
Now, did they figure out my password? Very unlikely, since my password is a random string of lower, upper case characters, numbers and special characters. Maybe they got it from another website they hacked into which shares the same password (not many). I think this is unlikely, since it requires the hacker to specifically focus on me, which is not what this looks like. I think someone found a vulnerability in your web hosting stack and exploited it en-masse.
I tried searching for a list of recent login events to my account on cPanel. There wasn't anything there. This was disappointing - you should be providing a list of recent login attempts and events.
I'm highly concerned about this, and would like to receive information on how this was possible, a log of login events for my account with IP addresses and time stamps, and what steps you are going to take to fix it (including a list of vulnerabilities you found).
I look forward to your response.
Chirag