Press Release
A data breach at Air India affects 4.5 million customers.
Following the intrusion of Passenger Service System supplier SITA in February 2021, personal data belonging to almost 4.5 million of Air India’s customers was exposed two months later. As a result, Air India announced a data breach.
On March 19, the national airline of India alerted travellers that SITA had been the target of a cyberattack.
In a breach notification sent over the weekend, Air India stated: “This is to inform you that SITA PSS, our data processor of the passenger service system (which is responsible for storing and processing of personal information of the passengers), had recently been subjected to a cybersecurity attack leading to personal data leak of certain passengers.”
Around 4,500,000 data subjects around the world were impacted by this incident.
The airline also said that between August 2011 and February 2021, there was a data breach that affected passenger information.
Nevertheless, it was discovered after looking into the security incident that neither passwords nor credit card information were obtained.
To prevent any hack attempts and ensure the security of their personal information, Air India advises its customers to change their login information.
According to an additional statement from Air India [PDF], “The breach involved personal data registered between 26th August 2011 and 3rd February 2021, with details that included name, date of birth, contact information, passport information, ticket information, Star Alliance, and Air India frequent flyer data (but no password data were affected), as well as credit cards data.
The CVV/CVC numbers for this last type of data, however, are not stored by our data processor.
We place the utmost value on protecting the personal information of our clients, and while we sincerely apologise for any inconvenience, we also value their continuing patronage and confidence. — India Air
Impact of data hack on Star Alliance members
Along with Air India, almost a dozen other airlines also warned customers that some of their personal information was compromised after a breach of SITA’s Passenger Service System (PSS), which manages everything from booking tickets to boarding.
SITA also acknowledged the situation and stated that it had contacted all relevant organisations and the impacted PSS users in early March.
When this happened, a SITA representative informed BleepingComputer that the breach affected the data of travellers from various airlines, including:
In terms of passengers carried, Lufthansa ranks second in Europe when combined with its subsidiaries; Member of Star Alliance and a partner of Miles & More
The national carrier of New Zealand is Air New Zealand.
Singapore Airlines is the nation’s primary airline.
Scandinavian Airlines (please disclose);
the national airline of Hong Kong, Cathay Pacific
The first and biggest low-cost airline in South Korea is Jeju Air.
The national airline of Malaysia is Malaysia Airlines.
The national airline and major airline of Finland is Finnair.
Some of these airlines, notably the largest airline in Europe, Lufthansa, are a part of the Star Alliance, a worldwide airline alliance with 26 members, which also includes Air India.
According to Star Alliance, its members also exchange customer information important to giving travel rewards.
Names of members, membership numbers in frequent flyer programmes, and programme tier status are the only pieces of information provided.
Press Release
NVIDIA resolves critical issues affecting Windows and Linux devices.
NVIDIA has released security upgrades to fix ten more bugs impacting the NVIDIA Virtual GPU (vGPU) management software in addition to six security holes discovered in Windows and Linux GPU display drivers.
The flaws make Windows and Linux systems vulnerable to attacks that could cause a denial of service, privilege escalation, data manipulation, or information disclosure.
Because all of these security flaws need local user access, potential attackers must first get access to susceptible targets via a different attack method.
Patching of eleven high severity vulnerabilities
Attackers can simply escalate privileges to obtain permissions above those provided by the OS after successfully exploiting one of the vulnerabilities fixed today.
Denial-of-service attacks or gaining access to otherwise inaccessible information can also be used to temporarily disable workstations running vulnerable drivers or software.
With the exception of the security flaws identified as CVE-2021-1052, CVE-2021-1053, and CVE-2021-1056 affecting the Linux GPU Display Driver for Tesla GPUs, which will start receiving an updated driver version on January 18, 2021, NVIDIA has patched all impacted software products and platforms.
The flaws have CVSS V3 base ratings ranging from 5.3 to 8.4, and NVIDIA has classified 11 of them as high-risk.
The risk assessment “is based on an average of risk across a broad set of deployed systems and may not represent the true risk of your local installation,” according to NVIDIA’s security alert.
To accurately assess the risk these vulnerabilities represent to your particular system configuration, the business further suggests speaking with an IT or security specialist.
The January 2021 Security Bulletin is a complete list of security problems that NVIDIA patched this month.
Several driver updates are accessible from hardware vendors.
NVIDIA advises users to use the security updates offered on the NVIDIA Driver Downloads page to upgrade their GeForce, NVIDIA RTX, Quadro, NVS, and Tesla GPU display drivers, as well as Virtual GPU Manager and guest driver software.
According to the business, certain consumers who choose not to manually fix the weaknesses might also get security upgrades bundled with Windows GPU display driver 460.84, 457.49, and 452.66 versions from their computer hardware vendors.
Users of the NVIDIA vGPU enterprise software must sign into the NVIDIA Enterprise Application Hub in order to download updates from the NVIDIA Licensing Center.
Press Release
By plugging in a mouse, Razer Bug enables you to access Windows 10 administration.
By just putting in a Razer mouse or keyboard, a Razer Synapse zero-day vulnerability that has been publicly published on Twitter enables you to take control of Windows as an administrator.
A well-known maker of computer accessories, Razer is well recognised for their gaming keyboards and mice.
The Razer Synapse programme will immediately download and start installing on a computer when a Razer device is plugged into Windows 10 or Windows 11. Users can set up macros, map buttons, and modify their gear using the software Razer Synapse.
Over 100 million people use Razer Synapse, according to Razer, who claims that number.
The plug-and-play Razer Synapse installation contains a zero-day vulnerability that, when exploited, allows users to swiftly gain SYSTEM access on a Windows system. This vulnerability was found by security researcher jonhat.
The greatest user rights in Windows, known as SYSTEM privileges, provide users the ability to run any command on the operating system. Basically, if a user has Windows’ SYSTEM capabilities, they have total control over the system and are able to install anything they want, including malicious software.
Razer had yet to respond, so yesterday jonhat revealed the zero-day vulnerability on Twitter and provided a little video explaining how the flaw operates.
Using a mouse while plugged in to gain access to the SYSTEM
We chose to test the flaw as BleepingComputer has a Razer mouse handy. We can confirm that it took us roughly two minutes to get SYSTEM rights in Windows 10 after plugging in our mouse.
It should be emphasised that this is a local privilege escalation (LPE) vulnerability, requiring physical access to a computer and a Razer device. To exploit the problem, all you need to do is purchase a $20 Razer mouse from Amazon and plug it into a Windows 10 computer.
On one of our Windows 10 machines, we set up a temporary ‘Test’ user with ordinary, non-administrator capabilities to test this flaw.
When we connected the Razer device to Windows 10, the operating system downloaded and set up both the driver and the Razer Synapse application automatically.
The Razer installation application got SYSTEM access as a result of the RazerInstaller.exe executable being started by a Windows process with SYSTEM privileges, as demonstrated below.
The setup procedure lets you choose the folder where the Razer Synapse software will be installed when you install it. Everything goes wrong when you have the choice of where to install your software.
The “Choose a Folder” window will show up when you move your folder. When you right-click the dialogue while holding down Shift, you will be given the option to “Open PowerShell window here,” which will launch a PowerShell prompt in the folder displayed in the dialogue.
This PowerShell prompt will inherit the same rights as the process that launched it because it was run with SYSTEM permissions.
As you can see in the screenshot below, after typing the “whoami” command at the PowerShell prompt, it became clear that the console has SYSTEM capabilities, enabling us to execute whatever command we like.
According to Will Dormann, a Vulnerability Analyst at the CERT/CC, other applications installed by the Windows plug-and-play mechanism is likely to include similar flaws.
Razer will address the flaw
Razer has contacted the security researcher to let them know that they will be delivering a remedy after this zero-day issue attracted significant notice on Twitter.
Despite the fact that the vulnerability was made public, Razer also informed the researcher that he would be getting a bug bounty payment.
Press Release
The New York Times reports that investigators are investigating whether solarwinds has been hacked via offices in Czech, Polish, and Belorussia, where many of the company’s engineering has taken place (NEW YORK TIMES).
Sources: investigators are checking if SolarWinds was hacked via its offices in Czechia, Poland, and Belarus, where the company moved much of its engineering — Those behind the widespread intrusion into government and corporate networks exploited seams in U.S. defenses and gave away nothing to American monitoring of their systems.
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