惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

A
About on SuperTechFans
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
C
Cisco Blogs
T
Tenable Blog
P
Privacy International News Feed
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
I
Intezer
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
IT之家
IT之家
博客园 - 司徒正美
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
博客园 - 【当耐特】
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
博客园 - Franky
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
V
Visual Studio Blog
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
H
Hacker News: Front Page
Latest news
Latest news
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
腾讯CDC
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
A
Arctic Wolf
S
Securelist
雷峰网
雷峰网
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
Project Zero
Project Zero
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
F
Fortinet All Blogs
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
S
Schneier on Security
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
Jina AI
Jina AI
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence

The Register

Grafana offers AI assistant for free, warns users not to go mad Right to repair champ Framework punts modular 13in laptop with Core Ultra Series 3 Scotland Yard can keep using live facial recognition on Londoners, say judges UK tribunal sends £2B claim accusing Microsoft of overcharging for licensing to trial Nation-states want to cause harm, not just steal cash - stop handing your cyber defenses to the cheapest contractor Murder, she wrote: Ex-FBI chief wants some ransomware crims charged with homicide Phone-to-satellite use goes into orbit, growing 25% in 8 months macOS ClickFix attacks deliver AppleScript stealers to snarf credentials, wallets Anthropic bakes memory fixes into Bun 1.1.13 as developers complain of leaks The spaghettified DBMS chart that shows Oracle's crown is slowly slipping Yet another ex-ransomware negotiator admits turning rogue after payoff from crimelords FAA grounds Blue Origin's New Glenn as it probes missed satellite delivery 'mishap' AMD's Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 Dual Edition tested: Gratuitous overkill with a price to match AI-assisted intruders pwned Vercel via OAuth abuse and a pilfered employee account Crook claims to leak 'video surveillance footage' of companies Met police trials snoop tech platform in push to cuff more London shoplifters England's school phone ban gets teeth, just in time to bite no one Adaptavist Group breach spawns imposter emails as ransomware crew claims mega-haul Panasonic creates device-locked QR codes to speed facial biometric capture Iran claims US used backdoors to knock out networking equipment during war NASA Inspector fears new spacesuits won’t be ready for Moon landing Vibe coding upstart Lovable denies data leak, cites 'intentional behavior,' then throws HackerOne under the bus Trump-branded datacenter project fails to make itself great, again World's blandest man steps down from CEO job to spend more time in tastefully appointed home Chase got a spiff of $77 million to create one job with New York datacenter Scot becomes second Scattered Spider-linked crook to plead guilty in US You too can build a nuclear battery from junk you have lying around the house Schmoozebots: study finds flattery will get AI everywhere One of Europe's sovereign cloud picks may not be so-sovereign after all New Android development tool designed for robots, not humans AI is reshaping Britain's datacenter map away from London HP's remote desktop push retreats as Anyware heads for end of life 'Invisible mouse' made a mess of PC rebuild NASA working on ‘Big Bang’ upgrade to keep the Voyagers alive for longer Indonesia’s game rating system paused amid claims it leaked developer creds and glimpses of major new titles Just like phishing for gullible humans, prompt injecting AIs is here to stay Atlassian’s new data collection policy protects rich customers while AI eats the rest Intel eases reliance on TSMC with 'Merica-made Core Series 3 processors NASA gets the ball rolling on its part in Europe's jinxed Mars rover mission Attention data hoarders: Alexa loses its Plex appeal as voice feature gets canned Locked-out iPhone user tells The Reg that Apple is scrambling to fix character flaw passcode bug Would you like fries with that terminal? Capita won disastrous UK pensions gig after acing performance checks NodeWeaver says its perpetual licensing beats VMware’s perpetual price hikes Maine to pause big bit barns as local opposition spreads If you want into Anthropic's Claude club, you may have to show ID DuckDB uses RDBMS to tackle lakehouse 'small changes' issue Iran has something America can only dream of: cheap broadband Brussels tells Google to hand rivals its search crown jewels as privacy row brews Visual Studio 18.5 lands with AI debugging at a price Git identity spoof fools Claude into giving bad code the nod McGraw Hill linked to 13.5M-record data leak Microsoft announces product it doesn't want anyone to buy Obsolete Google nag drowns out vital bar information at Swedish concert hall Cops hand Motorola £25M to keep 2000-era radios alive Server-room lock was nothing but a crock QUIC will soon be as important as TCP – but it's vastly different Nobody knows how many CVEs Anthropic's Project Glasswing has actually found Allbirds shoe company moving to AI infra is the top 20-year-old Enlightenment E16 bug finally gets patched Bad teacher bots can leave hidden marks on model students Autovista blames ransomware for service disruption Networks not ready for the challenges of AI traffic Windows takes a crash dump after one McDonald's too many French cops free mother and son after crypto kidnapping US states can't account for datacenter tax breaks. Literally Salesforce debuts Headless 360 agentic platform Fission impossible: Uncle Sam wants nuclear power in space UK told its Big Tech habit is now a national security risk UKAEA lays out roadmap to take Britain closer to fusion Waymo's self-driving cars face their toughest test yet: London The only technology that died more times than VR is AI, and that seems to have worked out Boeing soars past Airbus for the first time in years Commvault has a Ctrl+Z for rogue AI agents Nvidia slaps forehead: AI, that's what quantum needs! Oracle taps Bloom for fuel cells to support datacenter binge GitHub recalls Phabricator with preview of Stacked PRs Physicist proposes two-button calculator Amazon pays $11.5B to satisfy satellite-envy while cowering in Musk's shadow No honor among thieves as 0APT threatens rival ransomware gang Krybit NASA insiders oddly relaxed about latest budget threats Microsoft raises UK Surface prices as RAM crisis reaches the checkout OpenAI CEO Sam Altman home attack suspect charged Microsoft kills off Outlook Lite as memory costs skyrocket UK state bank considers lengthening disastrous IT program Japan going back to the future by reviving its chip industry Windows Update: Torture chamber for seldom-used PCs Japanese rocket came unglued, causing mission fail Here's how to watch the Artemis II splashdown Britain's biggest nuclear site skips competition, hands SAP £33M to start ERP switch Tech support chap's boss got him out of jail so he could finish a job World's smallest violin spotted at Amazon HQ as exec pay packets deflate Deere oh Deere: Tractor repair row heads for $99M settlement Spark creator bags computing gong for making big data a little bit smaller Microsoft locks out VeraCrypt and WireGuard devs, blames verification process Peace President's Iran war piles more pain on already battered PC market Amazon put a filesystem on S3; I showed up with a test suite and bad intentions UK to spend £15M on AI-powered crime mapping in knife violence crackdown DARPA looking for battery that could power a laptop for months Call your existing automation ‘zero-token architecture’ to become an instant agentic AI wiz
America's top cyber-defense agency left a GitHub repo open with passwords, keys, tokens – and incredibly obvious filenames
Jessica Lyons · 2026-05-20 · via The Register

REG AD

Security

I wonder what's in 'external-secret-repo-creds.yaml' and 'AWS-Workspace-Firefox-Passwords.csv'?

The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) left open a GitHub repository named “Private-CISA” containing plain-text passwords, private keys, tokens, and secrets – with obvious file names like “external-secret-repo-creds.yaml” and “AWS-Workspace-Firefox-Passwords.csv” – for six months.

GitGuardian researcher Guillaume Valadon, fresh off a recent talk on Kubernetes secret leaks, found the public repository on May 14, and told The Register that he “quickly understood that the leak was bad and that time was running out. A national agency having 844 MB of production infrastructure material in a public GitHub repository for six months is as serious as a secrets leak gets.” 

Valadon, who previously spent nine years at France’s CISA equivalent, ANSSI, told us the leak included tokens for CISA's internal JFrog Artifactory, Azure registry keys, AWS credentials, Kubernetes manifests, ArgoCD application files, Terraform infrastructure code, GitHub personal access tokens, and Entra ID SAML certificates.

REG AD

GitGuardian reported the leaky repository to CISA on May 14, and the agency took it down a day later. 

REG AD

A CISA spokesperson told The Register that it was aware of the report and is investigating. "Currently, there is no indication that any sensitive data was compromised as a result of this incident.”

It’s not a good look for the nation’s infosec agency, which hasn’t had a permanent boss since Trump took office,  is facing hundreds of millions of dollars in budgets cuts on top of deep cuts to staff and funding last year, and has suffered its share of embarrassing security snafus in the interim.

In a Tuesday blog, Valadon said he initially thought the repo “was a hoax, given how suspicious the directory names (Backup-April-2026/, All Backups/, LZ-Artifactory/, Kubernetes-Important-Yaml-Files/, ENTRA ID - SAML Certificates/ ...), file names (external-secret-repo-creds.yaml, CAWS GitHub Token.txt, Important AWS Tokens.txt, AWS-Workspace-Firefox-Passwords.csv, Kube-Config.txt ...), and their contents (private keys, personal and professional GitHub tokens, AWS secrets, ...) seemed too good to be true,” Valadon wrote.

It wasn’t a hoax  – “The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency is aware of the reported exposure and is continuing to investigate the situation,”  but it was a “catalogue of unsafe practices,” he added, containing passwords stored in plain text, backups committed to Git, and an “explicit” how-to guide for disabling GitHub's secret scanning.

After initially reporting the leak through the CERT/CC portal, and only receiving an auto-acknowledgement as of the morning of May 15  – a Friday  – Valadon alerted security journalist Brian Krebs about the publicly exposed secrets, which seemed to speed up CISA’s processes. By 6 pm EST that night, the feds took down the repository. 

Valadon told The Reg he gives CISA credit for quickly deleting the repository. “Most of our responsible disclosures take much longer, and many are never fixed,” he said. “Managing to take the repository offline in a day is impressive work.”

He doesn’t know if any other parties with less altruistic intentions found the secrets first, although the fact that the repository was never forked (based on public GitHub events) would seem to indicate that it wasn’t widely circulated on the dark web. 

“The only ones that can answer definitively is GitHub,” Valadon said. GitHub did not immediately respond to The Register’s inquiry.

REG AD

GitGuardian isn’t aware of any of the exposed credentials being abused by unauthorized individuals

“Each category of secret in the repository unlocks a specific attack path,” Valadon said. “Stacked together, they cover the full range: from destructive attacks and ransomware extortion to quiet, long-term persistence inside CISA's build and deployment pipeline. That last scenario worried me the most, and it's why I escalated through every channel we had until the repository was taken offline.”

Plus, the committer used both a CISA-issued contractor email and a personal Yahoo email across the same commits, and created the repository using a personal GitHub account. “That mixed-identity pattern is one of the hardest surfaces for security teams to cover, and it's where the worst leaks happen,” Valadon said.®