ArtiPACKED: Hacking Giants Through a Race Condition in GitHub Actions Artifacts


This research reviews an attack vector allowing the compromise of GitHub repositories, which not only has severe consequences in itself but could also potentially lead to high-level access to cloud environments.

This is made possible through the abuse of GitHub Actions artifacts generated as part of organizations’ CI/CD workflows. A combination of misconfigurations and security flaws can make artifacts leak tokens, both of third party cloud services and GitHub tokens, making them available for anyone with read access to the repository to consume. This allows malicious actors with access to these artifacts the potential of compromising the services to which these secrets grant access.

Read more…
Source: Palo Alto Unit 42


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • How Threat Intelligence Helps the Energy Sector Fight Cyberespionage

    August 13, 2019

    When it comes to cyber threats, some industries have it harder than others. Few are as heavily targeted by sophisticated cyberattacks as the energy sector. Over the last decade, state-sponsored hacking groups have routinely targeted utility networks and other energy providers for the purposes of espionage and disruption. And according to the latest research, advanced persistent threat (APT) ...

  • Hunting the Public Cloud for Exposed Hosts and Misconfigurations

    August 12, 2019

    This research explores the security landscape of the Internet-facing services hosted in Amazon AWS, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Platform. Public cloud is becoming increasingly popular and the reported total spending on cloud infrastructure grew 45.6% in 2018. Amazon AWS maintained its lead with a 31.3% share of the Cloud Service Provider (CSP) market, followed by Microsoft ...

  • Recent Cloud Atlas activity

    August 12, 2019

    Also known as Inception, Cloud Atlas is an actor that has a long history of cyber-espionage operations targeting industries and governmental entities. We first reported Cloud Atlas in 2014 and we’ve been following its activities ever since. From the beginning of 2019 until July, we have been able to identify different spear-phishing campaigns related to this threat actor ...

  • IT threat evolution Q2 2019: Targeted attacks and malware campaigns

    August 12, 2019

    In March, we published the results of our investigation into a sophisticated supply-chain attack involving the ASUS Live Update Utility, used to deliver BIOS, UEFI and software updates to ASUS laptops and desktops. The attackers added a backdoor to the utility and then distributed it to users through official channels. ASUS was not the only company used ...

  • Three major vulnerabilities found in Cisco SMB switches

    August 7, 2019

    Three of Cisco’s most popular switches for SMBs contain serious security flaws that could allow a hacker to remotely access the device and infiltrate an organisation’s network. The critical vulnerabilities, which affect Cisco’s Small Business 220 Series of smart switches, include a remote code execution (RCE) bug rated 9.8/10 by Cisco in terms of threat severity, an authentication bypass rated 9.1/10 ...

  • KDE Linux Desktops Could Get Hacked Without Even Opening Malicious Files

    August 7, 2019

    If you are running a KDE desktop environment on your Linux operating system, you need to be extra careful and avoid downloading any “.desktop” or “.directory” file for a while. A cybersecurity researcher has disclosed an unpatched zero-day vulnerability in the KDE software framework that could allow maliciously crafted .desktop and .directory files to silently run ...