this post was submitted on 19 May 2026
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[–] mlg@lemmy.world 84 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (3 children)

GitHub gets autoscanned by thousands of malicious actors for keys and credentials on every commit, including the comments lol.

The fact that CISA themselves never saw an automated breach attempt only minutes after pushing to github is the more interesting story here.

Either the contractor is so incompetent that they didn't have any logging set up and the breach went completely unnoticed for 6 months.

Or this really is some fat honeypot that they won't admit is a honeypot because they've been using it to watch or bait APTs.

Currently, there is no indication that any sensitive data was compromised as a result of this incident

This is literally impossible unless it really was a honeypot. You can demo this yourself in real time. Make a throwaway cloud account on your favorite provider, commit the cloud auth token into a repo, and you will see an automated bot login within minutes.

Commiting any secrets to a public repo should just be considered auto compromised because of how potent it is.

That stuff ususlly gets exposed via poor CI/CD permissions where credentials are required, but straight up file commit is like publicly announcing exactly where you left your house keys lol.

[–] Ironfacebuster@lemmy.world 30 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

Can confirm, with one of my first discord bots I accidentally committed the token and within a day someone logged in and announced in every server it was in that the token was compromised

[–] Taldan@lemmy.world 28 points 16 hours ago
[–] trackball_fetish@lemmy.wtf 8 points 21 hours ago

My first thought was that sounds intentional..

[–] 4am@lemmy.zip 7 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Straight up file committing is like making a copy of your house keys for anyone who can see you at that moment and all moments thereafter lol