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http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/02/14/claranet_linux_security_hole/



By Chris Williams and John Leyden

The Register

14th February 2008



A major security vulnerability in the Linux kernel, which was revealed

on Sunday, has claimed its first confirmed UK victim in business ISP

Claranet.



Hackers used a bug in the sys_vmsplice kernel call, which handles

virtual memory management, to gain root privileges and replace Claranet

customers' index.html files with the hacker's calling card.



The exploit was noticed at about 6pm on Tuesday.



Claranet said: "Malicious activity related to the vulnerability was

detected on Claranet's shared hosting platform. Within 10 minutes

Claranet contained and halted the malicious activity, and locked down

the platform to prevent further damage.



"The shared hosting platform was fully patched with the vendor's updates

by 10am on Wednesday. Less than one per cent of the total web sites

hosted on the Claranet platform were affected and all were restored to

their original states by 1pm on Wednesday 13 February."



The (potentially tricky) hacking process was dumbed down by the

publication of exploit code earlier this week, Linux-Watch notes.



Security notification firm Secunia reports that switching to either

version 2.6.23.16 or 2.6.24.2 of the Linux kernel guards against attack.

Hotfixes designed to plug the vulnerability short of upgrading the

kernel have also been released.



The affected system call first appeared in version 2.6.17 of the Linux

kernel, but wasn't left open to exploit until changes were made with the

2.6.23 version.



Linux vendors are working on a permanent fix for the problem. Claranet

emphasised that it keeps a close eye on announcements of new

vulnerabilities and acts swiftly to patch them.





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