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LastPass source code breach – incident response report released

If the big story of this month looks set to be Uber’s data breach, where a hacker was allegedly able to roam widely through the ride-sharing company’s network…

..the big story from last month was the LastPass breach, in which an attacker apparently got access to just one part of the LastPass network, but was able to make off with the company’s proprietary source code.

Fortunately for Uber, their attacker seemed determined to make a big, quick PR splash by grabbing screenshots, spreading them liberally online, and taunting the company with shouty messages such as UBER HAS BEEN HACKED, right in its own Slack and bug bounty forums:

https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2022/09/16/uber-has-been-hacked-boasts-hacker-how-to-stop-it-happening-to-you/

The attacker or attackers at LastPass, however, seem to have operated more stealthily, apparently tricking a LastPass developer into installing malware that the cybercriminals then used to hitch a ride into the company’s source code repository:

https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2022/08/29/lastpass-source-code-breach-do-we-still-recommend-password-managers/

LastPass has now published an official follow-up report on the incident, based on what it has been able to figure out about the attack and the attackers in the aftermath of the intrusion.

We think that the LastPass article is worth reading even if you aren’t a LastPass user, because we think it’s a reminder that a good incident response report is as useful for what it admits you were unable to figure out as for what you were.

What we now know

The boldface sentences below provide an outline of what LastPass is saying:

https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2022/09/09/how-to-deal-with-dates-and-times-without-any-timezone-tantrums/
https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2013/11/20/serious-security-how-to-store-your-users-passwords-safely/

What to do?

We think it’s reasonable to say that our early assumptions were correct, and that although this is an embarrassing incident for LastPass, and might reveal trade secrets that the company considered part of its shareholder value…

…this hack can be thought of as LastPass’s own problem to deal with, because no customer passwords were reached, let alone cracked, in this attack:

https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2022/09/01/s3-ep98-the-lastpass-saga-should-we-stop-using-password-managers-audio-text/

This attack, and LastPass’s own incident report, are also a good reminder that “divide and conquer”, also known by the jargon term Zero Trust, is an important part of contemporary cyberdefence.

As Sophos expert Chester Wisniewski explains in his analysis of the recent Uber hack, there’s a lot more at stake if crooks who get access to some of your network can roam around wherever they like in the hope of getting access to all of it:

Click-and-drag on the soundwaves below to skip to any point. You can also listen directly on Soundcloud.


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