MindBody-Owned FitMetrix Exposed Millions of User Records -- Thanks To Servers Without Passwords (techcrunch.com) 29
An anonymous reader writes: FitMetrix, a fitness technology and performance tracking company owned by gym booking giant Mindbody, has exposed millions of user records because it left several of its servers without a password. The company builds fitness tracking software for gyms and group classes -- like CrossFit and SoulCycle -- that displays heart rate and other fitness metric information for interactive workouts. FitMetrix was acquired by gym and wellness scheduling service Mindbody earlier this year for $15.3 million, according to a government filing. Last week, a security researcher found three FitMetrix unprotected servers leaking customer data. It isn't known how long the servers had been exposed, but the servers were indexed by Shodan, a search engine for open ports and databases, in September.
The servers included two of the same ElasticSearch instances and a storage server -- all hosted on Amazon Web Service -- yet none were protected by a password, allowing anyone who knew where to look to access the data on millions of users. Bob Diachenko, Hacken.io's director of cyber risk research, found the databases containing 113.5 million records -- though it's not known how many users were directly affected. Each record contained a user's name, gender, email address, phone numbers, profile photos, their primary workout location, emergency contacts and more. Many of the records were not fully complete.
The servers included two of the same ElasticSearch instances and a storage server -- all hosted on Amazon Web Service -- yet none were protected by a password, allowing anyone who knew where to look to access the data on millions of users. Bob Diachenko, Hacken.io's director of cyber risk research, found the databases containing 113.5 million records -- though it's not known how many users were directly affected. Each record contained a user's name, gender, email address, phone numbers, profile photos, their primary workout location, emergency contacts and more. Many of the records were not fully complete.
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This isn't even good trolling...
Where do companies find.... (Score:2)
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....these pinheads that set up these servers and don't even implement basic security??
LinkedIN
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It's probably people getting a proof of concept going, and management saying "perfect, ship it as-is tonight!"
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People who have been in IT long enough, don't build a proof of concept without planning on that becoming live.
All of my test systems are built to go live, from the beginning.
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A lot of managers believe that security has no ROI, and at worse, the consequences for a breach are minor. Even with the GDPR, a company just shrugs, says that the hackers are unstoppable, and life goes on.
As someone who has worked in Agile, if a developer has to choose between failing to make deliverables (which will get them fired immediately) versus some security issue that would get the company sued... they will take making their deliverables every time, because there are so many layers insulating them
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The H1-B outsourcing company that charges the least.
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They probably outsourced it --- and no where in the requirements did it say "please protect servers with a password"
I've taken to filling out false data anymore (Score:2)
Makes for interesting ads and assumptions for targetting (when the ads get through my browser)
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Yes. I now use the last 4 digits of my phone# for SSN these days. It works amazing well.
It's just a security question. And I also use a different month for DOB too (January 1, Feb 1, March 1 etc). Facebook is January (1), LinkedIn is Feb (2), Google is March (3), TicketMaster is (4) etc etc. This way when my data is stolen I know where the leak came from.
I have a scheme written down - just in case they ask me to prove myself.
From a management perspective, the real problem: (Score:1)
AWS (Score:2)
Hosted by AWS? Doesn't AWE ask to set up password by default?
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You can get "public" storage on AWS that you can hand out links to, no password required for read access. Of course, nobody with at least 1 brain cell uses this for confidential data.
Time to start to make them pay (Score:3)
I think the CEO and CISO behind bars for 10 years and having their private fortune impounded to pay for the damage would be a good start. But since the law is not about actually protecting citizens, nothing will happen and that state will continue.
Servers Without Passwords (Score:3, Funny)
I am the IT specialist of Servers Without Passwords, and after years of working with this non-profit NGO to liberate data in this increasingly locked-down online world, it's heartening to see headlines like these in recognition of our efforts.