NordVPN hit with major data breach
NordVPN and Torguard have come clean; VikingVPN has yet to confirm
Editor's note: NordVPN and TorGuard have both published statements on their respective sites providing more details on the incident.
One of the world's most popular VPN providers has revealed it was hacked by an unidentified party following a major data breach.
Details are still scant but the virtual private network provider has confirmed one of its datacenters was penetrated in March 2018.
"A few months ago, we became aware of an incident in March 2018 when a server at a datacenter in Finland we had been renting servers from was accessed without authorization," the company wrote in a blog post. "This was done through an insecure remote management system account that the datacenter had added without our knowledge. The datacenter deleted the user accounts that the intruder had exploited rather than notify us."
- These are the best VPN for China
- Check out our list of best VPN for streaming
- Looking for the best VPN for torrenting and torrents?
While NordVPN has a “zero log” policy that was recently independently audited, one may question the motives of the hacker or hackers.
“The server itself did not contain any user activity logs; none of our applications send user-created credentials for authentication, so usernames and passwords couldn’t have been intercepted either,” the blog added.
“On the same note, the only possible way to abuse the website traffic was by performing a personalized and complicated man-in-the-middle attack to intercept a single connection that tried to access NordVPN.”
Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!
"This was an isolated case, and no other servers or datacenter providers we use have been affected."
Two separate VPN issues
The hackers were able to identify an insecure remote management system that was operated by the datacenter provider and had full root access to a container server thanks to an expired TLS certificate.
In the own words of fellow hacker @hexdefined, this allowed “full control of everything in it (presumably including the ability to view and tamper with all network traffic going through it)”.
To make things even more interesting, two other VPN providers, access logs of VikingVPN and Torguard were also published alongside NordVPN on 8Chan, a possible indication that all three providers used the same data center.
- Discover the world's best services with our best VPN guide
Via Techcrunch
Désiré has been musing and writing about technology during a career spanning four decades. He dabbled in website builders and web hosting when DHTML and frames were in vogue and started narrating about the impact of technology on society just before the start of the Y2K hysteria at the turn of the last millennium.