What GoDaddy's Years-Long Breach Means for Millions of Clients
The same "sophisticated" threat actor has pummeled the domain host on an ongoing basis since 2020, making off with customer logins, source code, and more. Here's what to do.
Source code reveals how software works, helping security teams identify vulnerabilities, exposed secrets, and unsafe logic before attackers can exploit them.
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Source code is the human-readable text programmers write in a language such as Python, Java, or C before it is compiled or interpreted into a running program. It defines the program’s logic, data handling, and interactions with operating systems, networks, and other services. Source code may include application code, scripts, and configuration that controls software behavior.
In security, exposed or improperly protected repositories can disclose credentials, private keys, internal endpoints, or details that help attackers find exploitable flaws. Vulnerabilities may also enter through unsafe coding patterns, outdated dependencies, or malicious changes to code and build pipelines. Defenses include least-privilege repository access, secret scanning, peer review, static analysis, dependency and software-composition checks, and integrity controls for releases. Preserving commit history and build provenance helps investigators determine what changed and whether delivered software matches reviewed source.
The same "sophisticated" threat actor has pummeled the domain host on an ongoing basis since 2020, making off with customer logins, source code, and more. Here's what to do.
An advanced hacking operation dubbed 'SCARLETEEL' targets public-facing web apps running in containers to infiltrate cloud services and steal sensitive data. [...]
Web hosting giant GoDaddy made headlines this month when it disclosed that a multi-year breach allowed intruders to steal company source code, siphon customer and employee login credentials, and foist malware on customer websites. Media coverage understandably focused on GoDaddy's admission that it suffered three different cyberattacks over as many years at the hands of the same hacking group. But it's worth revisiting how this group typically got in to targeted companies: By calling employees and tricking them into navigating to a phishing website.