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eBay security conspiracy catches on with readersBackdoor manPublished Thursday 22nd February 2007 02:52 GMT Letters Our story reporting the abundance of people who believe there is a secret backdoor in eBay's network appeared to touch a nerve. Please continue to send tips to your reporter at the link above.
I had exactly this happen to my ebay auction on Saturday. I was selling my car - quite a rare one so relatively highly valued, checked back to see how the bidding was going and found that it had been hacked, a fake buy it now price and button inserted and a message from the gmail account in question (I still have the address) telling people that they could now buy the car for £5,000. I don't reply to odd emails, nor do I ever give my details out, but they somehow got so deep into my account they even changed my date of birth. Ebay never confirmed how it happened, they just pulled my listing. They did agree that my account had been hacked, but just made me go through the stupid "safety tutorial" before they would let me back into my account. The picture of the "Contivity VPN client" makes it look like the hacker hasn't so much "developed ... a sophisticated tool that reads confidential information residing on eBay's internal network", as "stolen one of their employees' RSA Secur-ID (or similar) keyfobs". That's what the number in the "token" field represents, and it means he's logging into their internal LAN - from which point it probably becomes trivial to gain access to the account data, management tools etc., internal security never being as good as it should be in corporate networks. So let me get this straight - some kid gets somebody to write a Firefox plugin for him that steals eBay login credentials, he gets lucky and get a forum moderator account, and uses that to modify hundreds (?) of auctions (because obviously forum moderators have that kind of power...) You don't think it likely that he used the *other* login credentials he stole to modify the auctions? No....too obvious. ^^ It looks like the hacker gained VPN access to the internal eBay network. That, along with the fact that they don't stored hashed passwords but plain text ones is a very likely explanation of what is happening. So it's just plain old fashioned hacking which leads to disastrous results because eBay's bad security design. Thanks for the Bape Hoody article on The Register. I too was scammed at the back end of 2006 with Bape Hoodies for sale on my account. Ebay suspended my account, threatened to terminate my account if I did it again and treated me like some sort of criminal. It's nice to know that I probably wasn't phished but disturbing that ebay may have such holes in its security. I read about ebay hijacking on a message board recently. One poster there pointed out that if you are logged into ebay from two separate machines and change the password on one, then the other machine is still logged in even though the details have changed. You can start and edit auctions from the second machine - thus the observed behaviour could happen if a hijacker was still logged whilst the password was changed. ®
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