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posted by cmn32480 on Sunday February 21 2016, @03:16PM   Printer-friendly
from the ruh-roh dept.

If you downloaded Mint Cinnamon today (for versions of "today" that include February 20th, 2016) you should immediately check the MD5 checksum. Blog Entry here.

From Clem:

We were exposed to an intrusion today. It was brief and it shouldn't impact many people, but if it impacts you, it's very important you read the information below.

Hackers made a modified Linux Mint ISO, with a backdoor in it, and managed to hack our website to point to it.

As far as we know, the only compromised edition was Linux Mint 17.3 Cinnamon edition.

If you downloaded another release or another edition, this does not affect you. If you downloaded via torrents or via a direct HTTP link, this doesn't affect you either.

Finally, the situation happened today, so it should only impact people who downloaded this edition on February 20th.

Apparently the hacked ISOs are hosted on 5.104.175.212 and the backdoor connects to absentvodka.com. Both lead to Sofia, Bulgaria, and the name of 3 people over there.

The comment thread suggests that the ISOs are showing up in other places, and that the Mint site may still not be entirely secure.


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  • (Score: 0, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 22 2016, @12:22AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 22 2016, @12:22AM (#307929)

    I seems that Clem and the guys need to brush up on site maintenance|security.

    Security has never been a priority for the mouth-breathers at Linux Mint, or the yokels who use it.

    It has always been an easy to install not-Windows. That's it.

    A few years ago, it was discovered that the Mint team was purposely withholding upstream security patches because it would be too difficult to apply them. What the actual fuck.

    Mint is like the Palemoon browser, a bunch of amateurs who wouldn't have a product if they couldn't leech from upstream contributors and then change the logo. I certainly do not trust them with my data.

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