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Fox News' FTP Password Anyone?
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Mon Jul 23, 2007 08:07 AM
from the fair-and-balanced dept.
from the fair-and-balanced dept.
An anonymous reader writes "While browsing around the Fox News website, I found that directory indexes are turned on. So, I started following the tree up, until I got to /admin. Eventually, I found my way into /admin/xml_parser/zdnet/, in which, there is a shell script. Seeing as it's a shell script, and I use Linux, I took a peek. Inside, is a username and password to an FTP. So, of course, I tried to login. The result? Epic fail on Fox's part. And seriously, what kind of password is T1me Out. This is just pathetic." It's already been changed of course, but that's still pretty amusing.
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Wasted chance (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Funny)
Now, is that "ton is of free publicity", or does Mr. Ton have a lot of "of free publicity" that he could potentially give to you?
Parent
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Clinton believed they were there, because at the time Saddam was refusing to let UN inspectors do their job. By the time Bush had invaded, the UN inspectors had already been in and found nothing.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
North Korea (Score:5, Insightful)
You make a very good point.
North Korea is also part of the "Axis of Evil". However they have WMD's and some pretty nasty long range missiles. They may not be able to strike The US, but they could devastate South Korea, Japan and Taiwan. We keep begging North Korea to please, pretty please, come to the negotiating table. No talk of invasion there.
Sadam complied with the U.N. inspections we demanded. Grudgingly but he complied. He ended his weapons programs and allowed us and our allies to control two thirds of his air space. (All of this had to be forced on him, but he complied).
So the moral of the story?
If you are an evil dictatorship, do not comply with The US and its allies. Build up your arsenal and become as powerfull and as dangerous as possible. The US only invades weaklings. The US begs for negotiations with the dangerous crackpots.
I believe Iran watched all of this unfold. The way Sadam and Iraq complied, and were rewarded with invasion. The way North Korea refused to comply and became more dangerous, and gets more and more aid on its terms.
This is why Iran has restarted its nuclear program.
Pretty good foreign policy we have, huh?
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, Clinton and Bush both new that Saddam had chemical and biological weapons because the USA sold them to him (http://www.commondreams.org/headlines02/0908-08.h tm). However, what they did not know is if he still had them at the time of the invasion (although best guess is Bush did know that Saddam did not
Ditto on all accounts (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyone looking just at the inspectors' reports would not believe that Saddam had "stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction" as was claimed by some. You don't get stockpiles from "losing track of the actual truth". you don't get mass destruction from a few ancient chemical weapons.
Using the advantage of hindsight, the answer is obvious; just follow the money. The Bush administration had a significant financial motivation for the invasion, so they hyped it in any way they could. (Example: Nigerian yellowca
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Insightful)
Idle curiosity: Do you think a smart-assed remark about how you, unlike the other guy, are too good for personal attacks is something other than a personal attack?
Parent
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Insightful)
Not everyone who has the president's ear is appointed by him. He showed some bad judgment prior to the invasion and obviously some of his appointees were poor picks given our post-9/11 hindsight. My point is that there wasn't a crystal-clear picture either way prior to invasion, and Bush's vision was even more filtered because those he most trusted were unwilling or unable to tell him the whole story.
Iraq was big stupid mess from day one, no doubt about that. But let's not try to paint the whole administration as malicious warmongering tyrants when in all reality they're just inept shoot-from-the-hip bureaucrats.
The sad thing is, I really don't believe we'd have been much better with either of our presidential alternatives: I think Gore would have found a completely different way to bungle things after 9/11 and make someone miserable (probably us) and Kerry would probably have really fouled up the occupation...yes, even more than Bush.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
It's rather disengenuous to cite quotes from 1998 when he did have WMD programs to justify actions taken in 2003 when he did not have any WMD programs.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Yep. In 1998. Then we invaded, destroyed stockpiles, and ushered in the inspection teams.
What that has to do with GWB's claims in 2003 I don't know, but I'm sure that completely unbiased and non-partisan site you linked to has an answer.
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Insightful)
This isn't about believing in WMDs before the invasion. This is about believing that we found WMDs AFTER the invasion. In an October 2003 poll, for example, 7 months after the invasion, 33% of Fox viewers said that the U.S. had actually physically found WMDs in the course of the invasion. That's 10% higher than the next most confused media viewership. This is what some of us would really love to see explained by you "nothing to see here" apologists. Or else, it sounds like you still maintain that's a reasonable belief today?
http://www.americanassembler.com/issues/media/docs /Media_10_02_03_Report.pdf [americanassembler.com]
Parent
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Informative)
I know that I will get flamed for this but it is the truth.
Parent
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Informative)
And, of course, there were also incidents where the insurgent groups got ahold of some lingering chemical weapons (mustard gas, I think) and tried to make bombs out of them--luckily, that also was old and non-effective. Those were widely reported at the time.
In other words, get off your uninformed, sanctimonious high-horse.
Parent
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately, the issue is not as black and white as the pundits on either side would like you to believe. There is, unfortunately, some wiggle room that gets used to support either one side or the other depending upon the speaker. The problem lies in the strictness of one's definition of WMDs and the categorization by some people of certain chemical weapons as WMDs despite the fact that such weapons are orders or magnitude less destructive than say the nuclear weapons that they are grouped with. Now, having said that it *is* true that US forces in Iraq have, from time to time, come across the odd Artillery shell filled with mustard or even a binary form of sarin in one case (used as a roadside bomb and a couple of US soldiers experienced minor symptoms, but no deaths). At best one could say that such finds are execeedingly rare and do not in and of themselves constitute evidence of a vast and active program on the part of Saddam to develop and use these weapons in the years immediately prior to the invasion. However, proof is proof and if even one shell is found then the number of "WMDs" was not zero and that is why the pundits continue arguing the points. This is splitting hairs maybe but if one argues that there were absolutely *no* WMDs in Iraq prior to the invasion then strictly speaking that person would be wrong. The problem lies in the use of absolutes in argumentation where even one counter-example disproves the argument.
Parent
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Insightful)
The specific charge Bush used to get our panties in a wad was nuclear weapons. "We don't want the smoking gun to be in the form of a mushroom cloud." Yellow cake uranium, lie. Aluminum tubes, lie. The CIA was giving Bush solid intel but he and his team refused to accept it. Cheney and his cronies cherry-picked raw intel for the most sensationalistic shit they could find, regardless of whether it was true or not.
When you say "most people assumed Saddam had WMD" you really mean "Most people assumed he had some leftover chemical or biological shit", not that he had nukes ready to strike the west in 45 minutes. The consensus before 9-11, a consensus backed by Powell, was that the US policy of Iraqi containment was working.
I'm sick of lies and lying liars. I'm sick of people who rewrite the facts to justify doing something and then rewrite history to protect themselves from that fuckup.
Parent
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Interesting)
Has anyone looked at the development of Dubai over the past 10 years? or the wealth of the royal family in Saudi Arabia? Money is flowing to someone from somewhere over there that is for sure.
Now I'm not saying that Saudi's or UAE citizens are evil by default, simply that there has been absolutely 0 backlash against these regions while the US uses 9/11 to justify everything else it has been doing everywhere else.
Wheres the puzzled slightly-tilted looks of hwhaaa?
Parent
Re:Wasted chance (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
HaHa (Score:5, Funny)
Nice... (Score:5, Funny)
Changed by whom? (Score:5, Funny)
Great all we need. (Score:5, Funny)
Followed up with "Hackers: Evil and must be stopped?" to linking hacking to Obama, a danger to your kids and finally Hackers gone wild at Spring break.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Either that, or we need to begin teaching nubile drunken 22-year-olds to hack.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
what's wrong with T1me Out (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:what's wrong with T1me Out (Score:5, Funny)
Great - now I have to go change all my passwords.
Parent
Re:what's wrong with T1me Out (Score:5, Funny)
>Great - now I have to go change all my passwords.
Don't feel bad, I had the same combination on my luggage.
Parent
Re:what's wrong with T1me Out (Score:5, Funny)
Don't worry about it. I just did it for you.
Parent
Re:what's wrong with T1me Out (Score:5, Funny)
A system that I was managing once started crashing, and further investigation revealed that the password of an upstream system had been changed. When we contacted the admin team of the offending application, they informed us that they had upgraded the password from 123 to the "highly secure" (in their words) 234.
Parent
Re:what's wrong with T1me Out (Score:5, Insightful)
There is something very wrong with writing the password down, in plain text, on a public-facing server and assuming that no-one will be able to see it.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
In other words, yes, this password was prone to be dict'ed.
Re:what's wrong with T1me Out (Score:5, Insightful)
Great--now you've got 8 people making the same joke.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:what's wrong with T1me Out (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Completely random password, whatever! (Score:3, Insightful)
Bingo! Never, ever, ever! NEVER store a password in plaintext in a script. Not ever. That's always a huge security issue, because you never know who is going to read the file. If you need unattended logins, there's SSH, Kerberos/GSSAPI, whatever.
Not a horrible password (Score:4, Informative)
Not really going to harm Fox (Score:5, Interesting)
There seems to be a string of these lately between content aggregators. About a month ago there was that page on MS's site endorsing Linux. Turns out the content was from another site (I think, actually, CNet).
Not to say I'm not totally surprised. In this day when about 50% of someone's site is content from somebody else, it's not surprising there's snafus. I'm just waiting for the day when one of the sites leaves up SSH logins for another.
Let's see here (Score:4, Insightful)
Corporation that people don't like has bad security: Note after note about how evil the company is and that they're idiots in the highest sense.
Ridiculous summary (Score:5, Insightful)
2) Why the hell are you blaming Fox? You think the entire company sat in a conference room and decided on a security scheme and a password?
3) Why did this deserve front page news? Exploits like this are found on a daily basis, and ones much more humorous/interesting/newsworthy.
Re:Ridiculous summary (Score:5, Informative)
At least the story had "ftp" in it, making it slightly more "for nerds".
Peter
PS. I was against the war, I'm against Bush and I think Fox sucks, but even so (and as the parent post points out), this is a bit tenuous.
Parent
NEWS FLASH: Left-Wing Fascists mod parent off-topc (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
4chan (Score:4, Insightful)
This is the closest Fox News will ever get... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Linux Ver Security hole, fox stupidity, or both (Score:4, Funny)
Parent