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Story of XZ Backdoor [video](youtube.com)
86 points by Ulf950 4 hours ago | 30 comments
II2II 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Even though the video is somewhat sensationalized at some points, it is well worth a watch for people who are interested in computers but don't have a background in it. There is a nice mixture of everything from history (e.g. the founding of the FSF) to a clear explanation of a compression algorithm (clear enough that one should be able to implement it). It also makes claims that should make some people stop and think about the industry as a whole (such as Linux being the most important contemporary operating system).

I'm not sure if it is HN-crowd type material since it is easy enough information for most of us to dig up, assuming we didn't already know it. Yet it does not simplify things to the point of, "technology is magic."

coldpie 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

This is IMO one of the coolest tech stories to ever happen, seriously amazing spycraft & hacking skills, but I haven't been keeping up with new developments from this story since it broke. Last I heard, the best guess at what happened was some state-sponsored actor worked very hard to get this merged, and it was caught luckily at the last minute. But no one had any smoking gun as to who did it or why or who they were targeting. Any new developments since then? Are we still just totally in the dark about what was going on here?

tokyobreakfast an hour ago | parent | next [-]

> and it was caught luckily at the last minute

This isn't correct at all. The changes were merged into xz and made it into testing branches of major Linux distros.

It was caught at T plus a few minutes only because a neurotic Microsoft employee performing debugging noticed an obscure performance issue.

You can literally say Microsoft saved Linux that day. Imagine thinking this 25 years ago.

It's the difference between something really bad which happened, and something really, really, really, really bad: a malicious actor having RCE credentials to every new Debian and Red Hat box on planet Earth.

ApolloFortyNine an hour ago | parent [-]

Redhat actually stumbled on the bug separately with valgrind errors triggering, so it's days were likely numbered regardless. Probably saved them a lot of debugging but the writing was on the wall.

tokyobreakfast an hour ago | parent [-]

A lot of people fail to fully grasp how bad this could have been on the off chance the authors were slightly less sloppy.

leonidasv an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Stuxnet is also another mindblowing case. Wired write-up on it is a recommended reading: https://web.archive.org/web/20141028182107/http://www.wired....

nerevarthelame 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Still no smoking gun, but possibly Russia. From the video https://youtu.be/aoag03mSuXQ?t=2883:

> A lot of the aliases, like Jia Tan, they sound like Asian names, and the published changes are all timestamped in UTC+8, Beijing time. So the signs point to China. And that's why it's probably not China. I mean, why would they make it that obvious? Every other part of the operation has been so meticulous, so cautious.

> And they also worked on Chinese New Year, but not on Christmas. And over the years, there were nine changes that fall outside of the Beijing time into UTC+2, which is a time zone that includes Israel and parts of Western Russia. That's why some experts have speculated that this could be the work of APT29, a Russian-state-backed hacker group also known as Cozy Bear. But again, do we know? No, of course we don't know who it is, and we likely will never know.

lrasinen 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

UTC+2 isn't very convincing as an argument for Russia. Only the Kaliningrad exclave uses that timezone, and if I were in a state-backed group, I'd live in one of the big cities.

Also quick search suggested UTC+3 was seen during the summer, and Russia doesn't do DST either.

Edit: some of the UTC+2/3 times are attributable to being differences in git committer and author dates (e.g. email patches)

chatmasta 34 minutes ago | parent [-]

I’ve always found this an amusing method of attribution considering top tier hackers are unlikely to be writing code only during office hours.

gosub100 3 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Russians don't celebrate Christmas on the 25th.

dijit 2 hours ago | parent [-]

That was also what I took away when watching the video. Russians don't celebrate Christmas on the 25th (they Celebrate on January 7th), but even more than that: Russians don't celebrate Christmas the same way we do in the west.

Their "Christmas" family celebrations are on New Years Eve.

So if you're drawing conclusions from them not working on the 25th (which is a literal normal day in eastern europe) then signs point elsewhere unfortunately.

ginko 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

>And that's why it's probably not China. I mean, why would they make it that obvious?

That's just what they want you to think!

mc32 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Those anecdotes don’t mean anything. If I were China and wanted plausible deniability I would work on CNY and take off on foreign holidays. Of course that leaves Beijing time as a weird oversight though it’s always Beijing time anywhere in China.

k2enemy 43 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Oxide and Friends also had a great podcast with Andres about the discovery:

https://oxide-and-friends.transistor.fm/episodes/discovering...

forinti 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Ireland recently created a Basic Income scheme for artists.

Europe should have an equivalent scheme for programmers of important Open Source projects such as this one.

anarazel 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Just German, not European, but still a start: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sovereign_Tech_Agency

mc32 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

The problem was more than remuneration. It was burnout and mental health issues. They may have been moderated by income but we don’t know.

Also today as I understand it much of OSS is done in-house by major companies (red hat, Ubuntu, ibm, Google, etc)

ting0 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

https://boehs.org/node/everything-i-know-about-the-xz-backdo...

This is the scariest part to me:

> A pull request (https://github.com/jamespfennell/xz/pull/2) to a go library by a 1Password employee is opened asking to upgrade the library to the vulnerable version

2OEH8eoCRo0 an hour ago | parent [-]

People are always trying to bump versions because it's (usually) an easy contribution.

amiga386 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Lovely video, going into almost everything...

...and yet, zero mention of systemd's recommendation for programs to link in the libsystemd kitchen sink just to call sd_notify() (which should really be its own library)

...and no mention of why systemd felt the need to preemptively load compression libraries, which it only needs to read/write compressed log files, even if you don't read/write log files at all? Again, it's a whole independent subsystem that could be its own library.

The video showed that xz was a dependency of OpenSSH. It showed on screen, but never said aloud, that this was only because of systemd. Debian/Redhat's sshd [0] was started with systemd and they added in a call to the sd_notify() helper function (which simply sends a message to the $NOTIFY_SOCKET socket), just to inform systemd of the exact moment sshd is ready. This loads the whole of libsystemd. That loads the whole of liblzma. Since the xz backdoor, OpenSSH no longer uses the sd_notify() function directly, it writes its own code to connect to $NOTIFY_SOCKET. And the sd_notify manpage begrudgingly gives a listing of code you can use to avoid calling it, so if you're an independent program with no connection to systemd, you just want to notify it you've started... you don't need to pull in the libsystemd kitchen sink. As it should've been in the first place.

Is the real master hacker Lennart Poettering, for making sure his architectural choices didn't appear in this video?

[0]: as an aside, the systemd notification code is only in Debian, Redhat et al because OpenSSH is OpenBSD's fork of Tatu Ylönen's SSH, which went on to become proprietary software. systemd is Linux-only and will never support OpenBSD, so likewise OpenBSD don't include any lines of code in OpenSSH to support systemd. Come to think of it, "BSD" is another thing they don't mention in the script, despite mentioning the AT&T lawsuit (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USL_v._BSDi)

rwmj an hour ago | parent | next [-]

When I was being interviewed, we did talk about exactly this, including that libsystemd is a kitchen sink, and that eventually OpenSSH went with open-coding the equivalent to sd_notify instead of depending on libsystemd. (Also that ahem Red Hat added the dependency on libsystemd in a downstream patch oops).

However the editors (correctly IMHO) took the decision to simplify the whole story of dependencies. In an early draft they simplified it too much, sort of implying that sshd depended directly on liblzma, but they corrected that (adding the illustration of dependencies) after I pointed out it was inaccurate.

I agree with everything you say, but you have to pick your battles when explaining very complicated topics like shared libraries to a lay audience.

In general I was impressed by their careful fact checking and attention to detail.

Sadly they missed the misspelling (UNRESOVLED) even though I pointed it out last week :-( But that's literally the only thing they didn't fix after my feedback.

dralley 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

It did get mentioned - in the context of the upstream change to dynamically load those libraries being a threat to the hack's viability which may have caused "Jia Tan" to rush and accidentally make mistakes in the process.

amiga386 2 hours ago | parent [-]

They say "an open-source developer requests to remove the dependency that links xz to OpenSSH" while showing https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/31550 on screen, zoomed and focused so the word "systemd" does not appear.

They never once utter the word "systemd", anywhere in the script... isn't that strange for such a key dependency?

mayama 40 minutes ago | parent [-]

It probably is because of video length, mentioning systemd would mean explaining init system which could add another 5 min runtime. At least they showed it in diagram of dependencies.

mayama 43 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

From my vague memory of xz backdoor, I don't even recall systemd being involved. Now, I get what people are talking about when they said systemd is taking over everything and why there was so much pushback to systemd when it was being added to distros. For me as a end user/dev, it mattered little whether services were started by systemd, openrc etc.

rwmj 7 minutes ago | parent [-]

libsystemd was the indirect dependency that caused liblzma to be pulled into sshd.

dijit 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I actually watched this last night, and while I totally understand that criticism is easy, and making things is hard (and the production quality here is great); I got a weird vibe from the video when it comes to who it is for.

The technical explanations are way too complex (even though they're "dumbed down" somewhat with the colour mixing scenario), that anyone who understands those will also know about how dependencies work and how Linux came to be.

It feels almost like it's made for people like my mum, but it will lose them almost immediately at the first mention of complex polynomials.

The actual weight of the situation kinda lands though, and that's important. It's really difficult to overstate how incredibly lucky we were to catch it, and how sophisticated the attack actually was.

I'm really sad that we will genuinely never know who was behind it, and anxious that such things are already in our systems.

alt227 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

My partner who is an accountant, so intelligent but not technical, watched some Veritasium documentaries the other day.

Her comment was that she was really impressed that it didnt dumb anything down like normal documentaries do. She was able to follow along more technical stuff than she anticipated, and that made her enjoy it even more.

I think we need to give people more credit when it comes to complex or techincal explanations. If people are enjoying the context but dont understand the techincal, they can just gloss over that if they prefer. But I felt this was quite telling at how and why Veritasium is such a popular channel.

alnwlsn 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Veritasium started out as a physics channel, and they've covered a wide variety of physics, math and science topics. They are never afraid of showing you the math, but one of the things I think they are really good at is not losing the human part of the story even if you can't follow the numbers exactly. At the end of the day it's humans who came up with this stuff in the first place, so it must be possible to understand it.

They aren't really a technology channel though, at least as it relates to software/computers, so that's probably why the video starts out with a brief history of Linux.

mbauman 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I'm still floored that Andres both found this and didn't ignore it. It's such a testament to an incredible engineer.

(But also, my conspiratorially-inclined mind is quite entertained by the thought of some sort of parallel construction or tip from a TLA.)