OCR Software Dev Abbyy Exposes 200,000 Customer Documents (bleepingcomputer.com) 25
A misconfigured MongoDB server belonging to Abbyy, an optical character recognition software developer, allowed public access to customer files. From a report: Independent security researcher Bob Diachenko discovered the database on August 19 hosted on the Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud platform. It was 142GB in size and it allowed access without the need to log in. The sizeable database included scanned documents of the sensitive kind: contracts, non-disclosure agreements, internal letters, and memos. Included were more than 200,000 files from Abbyy customers who scanned the data and kept it at the ready in the cloud. "Some collection names like 'documentRecognition,' or 'documentXML' hinted that database would be part of a data recognition company infrastructure," Diachenko writes in a blog post today.
All hail the cloud (Score:2)
Don't bother keeping anything onsite. Thanks, AWS.
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MongoDB is Web Scale!! (Score:2)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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No surprise here (Score:4, Insightful)
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it would be crazy to upload my private sensitive documents to randos on the Internet and assume that they'll never be seen.
?? I thought if you uploaded it to the internet you WANTED it to be seen, that was the whole POINT. Otherwise what's it doing up there?
Oh, you want security? Keep it directly under your control then and watch it. Better yet, encrypt it at rest and watch out for temp files and bad janitors and evil maids.
(I thought that a bad janitor forgot to empty the trash and an evil maid put the horse head in the bed in Godfather. Live and learn.)
Don't do it (Score:1)
I have absolutely zero pity for the companies/people who uploaded such data to abbyy's servers. They perfectly knew what they were doing. You don't store private data unecrypted in the cloud unless you want to share it with the entire world.
the DB itself was on the web? and not under proxy (Score:2)
the DB itself was on the web? and not under some kind of proxy?
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Outsourcing to cloud service was successful (Score:4, Interesting)
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Or ... why is it always mongodb?
A naive question (Score:2)
Granted, there are issues of what companies want public and what they want private. I'm guessing anything bigger than a gig might trigger a warning, as would anything with personal data.
Then again, I've never used the cloud for anything more than transferring stuff from my phone to my PC, or vice versa, and have never used AWS. So I have no real
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That's the crazy thing - AWS has the concept of a "VPC", and it has the concept of "public" and "private" subnets inside your VPC. If you put a VM in "private", it won't get an internet IP, and so instantly becomes inaccessible to the Internet. You don't need any fancy reviews or certifications for that - just a modicum of common sense. Hell, even if they'd used their app server as a jumpbox to get to their Mongo server, that would have been better than this.
This wasn't an issue of an "incorrectly configure
Unsurprising (Score:2)
While I actually do have a couple of Abbyy programs installed (FineScanner Pro and Business Card Reader Pro), I've never actually made serious use of them. On the other hand, I do use Microsoft's Office Lens program which provides much of the same capabilities - but provided under the Office 365 bundling