Old Apache Airflow installs leaking thousands of user credentials

Insecure coding practices was another source that exposed sensitive data

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

Older versions of Apache Airflow were found to have exposed credentials of popular services includingcloud hosting providers, social media platforms, andpayment processing services, according to researchers.

Apache Airflow is the most-starredopen sourceworkflow application onGitHubthat’s used forautomating business and IT tasks.

Cybersecurityresearchers atIntezer discoveredthat misconfigurations in older versions not just leaked data, but could also perhaps enabled malicious code execution on the exposed production environments.

We’re looking at how our readers use VPNs with streaming sites like Netflix so we can improve our content and offer better advice. This survey won’t take more than 60 seconds of your time, and we’d hugely appreciate if you’d share your experiences with us.

Click here to start the survey in a new window«

“This leak is extremely significant. Unlike more traditional credential leaks that impact individual user accounts, these credential leaks impact entire application framework instances,” Jake Williams, co-founder and chief technology officer at incident response company BreachQuest Inc., toldSiliconANGLE.

Insecure coding practices

Insecure coding practices

Explaining the exposure, the researchers note that Airflow uses standardPythonto create and schedule workflows. The project has had two major releases since 2015, though there have been several interim releases that have subsequently improved the security of the platform.

To illustrate the fallacy in the older versions, the researchers note that Airflow versions prior to v1.10 allowed users to run ad-hoc queries against thedatabasewithout any authentication, which is a dangerous ability to have on a production database exposed to the internet.

By focusing on the older, unsecure releases, the researchers discovered that misconfigured instances also exposed credentials, giving threat actors access to legitimate accounts and databases on platforms such asAWS,Google Cloud,WhatsApp,Slack, MySQL,Binance,PayPal,Stripe, and a lot more.

Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter

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!

In a bizarre discovery, the researchers reveal that besides misconfiguration many of the credentials were exposed through insecure coding practices, such as hardcoded passwords in production code.

Intezer has notified all affected entities, urging them to fix their misconfigured Airflow instances, even as it asks Apache Airflow users to ensure they update their older instances to the latest one immediately.

ViaSiliconANGLE

With almost two decades of writing and reporting on Linux, Mayank Sharma would like everyone to think he’sTechRadar Pro’sexpert on the topic. Of course, he’s just as interested in other computing topics, particularly cybersecurity, cloud, containers, and coding.

New fanless cooling technology enhances energy efficiency for AI workloads by achieving a 90% reduction in cooling power consumption

Samsung plans record-breaking 400-layer NAND chip that could be key to breaking 200TB barrier for ultra large capacity AI hyperscaler SSDs

NYT Strands today — hints, answers and spangram for Sunday, November 10 (game #252)