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The OneLogin hack is blowing up now it seems like whoever got access can also decrypt encrypted customer data which is just about AS BAD as it can get for a password/identity management service.
Now I’m a HUGE supporter of password management tools as I’ve mentioned many times here, so anyone who signed up for this one – sorry.. I recently switched to Dashlane, which seems great – and now I’m recommending that so I hope it’s as safe as they claim.
Identity management outfit OneLogin has revealed it’s suffered a security incident that’s seen “unauthorized access to OneLogin data in our US data region”, but has offered rather scarier information in different documents.
The company blog describes only “unauthorized access”. In emails sent to customers seen by The Reg the company adds news that “customer data was potentially compromised.” And on a registration-required support page the threat is described as follows:
“All customers served by our US data center are affected; customer data was compromised, including the ability to decrypt encrypted data.”
Decrypt data? Woah! That’s a bit more than mere unauthorized access.OneLogin’s blog does say that customers have been told what to do in the wake of the attack and the email we’ve seen does “strongly advise” customers to visit support page to which we have linked.
So a service got hacked? No big deal right? Some user data got leaked though, oh well that’s not that common. Sadly that’s not where it ends, OneLogin has said the attackers have the ability to decrypt encrypted data.
WHAT? How does that even happen, does that mean the keys were right there on the server with the data? that’s just insanity.
The company says it is “working with an independent security firm to determine how the unauthorized access happened and verify the extent of the impact of this incident.” In the email to customers it adds that it can’t reveal all, due to the involvement of law enforcement agencies. The blog says the company is “actively working to determine how best to prevent such an incident from occurring in the future and will update our customers as these improvements are implemented.”
OneLogin offers a single sign-on and other authentication management services it says gives “employees, customers and partners with secure access to your cloud and company apps on any device.”
It’s not the only such outfit: The Register in no way suggests that the likes of Okta, VMware and Citrix have been attacked, but notes all offer single-sign-on across lots of cloudy apps and are therefore obviously a tasty target for criminals who want to get their hands on lots of credentials with one hit.
So this company claiming to provide secure access has been totally owned, doesn’t give you much confidence does it?
They are also hiding behind claims of law enforcement involvement to avoid sharing more details about the breach. We shall have to see if anything comes out in the future (which from past experience is highly unlikely).
Source: The Register
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