Is this Bug Bleeding Us of Our Security on the Internet?
The
Heartbleed Bug—or CVE-2014-0160,
as it is officially known—has a lot of people worried about their
privacy and security online. The bug, discovered on April 7, 2014, is a weakness
in the “OpenSSL cryptographic software library” that enables hackers to
steal private information from unwitting victims. Problematically, OpenSSL is
the most of its kind, and it is likely that everyone using the internet was
affected, either directly or indirectly.
As
explained on the Heartbleed Bug website:
“The
Heartbleed bug allows anyone on the Internet to read the memory of the systems
protected by the vulnerable versions of the OpenSSL software. This compromises
the secret keys used to identify the service providers and to encrypt the
traffic, the names and passwords of the users and the actual content. This
allows attackers to eavesdrop on communications, steal data directly from the services
and users and to impersonate services and users.”
It is
impossible to tell whom this bug has affected. Before it was discovered by
security engineers and Google security expert in Finland, it went undetected. Today,
there are websites that test
whether a URL is vulnerable, and allows users to see for themselves what
passwords they need to change to stay protected.
Websites
are now attempting to determine whether the bug affected them, and what
security measures and changes need to be put in place before they can be safe
again. Meanwhile, consumers
are worried about the possibility that their credit card numbers and other
personal information are in the hands of hackers. Computer security experts
have urged all internet users to change their passwords to be on the safe side.
Passwords for email accounts, bank accounts, and even Facebook and Twitter can
all be used to possibly exploit users.
Further
complicating the matter is the revelation that not only websites are vulnerable
to the bug: many
internet devices are as well. At least two-dozen devices have been
identified as vulnerable, from servers and routers to video cameras and videoconference
devices. Companies would have been especially susceptible to these types of
attacks. Hackers would have had access to phone conversations and voicemails,
and no one would have been the wiser.
Not just
businesses are vulnerable, though. Thousands of people are at risk of bring
hacked if they use certain smartphones. Despite Google’s
statement that all of its Android phones were immune to attack, the company
added a “limited exception.” However, this exception is not so limited, as the
vulnerable version, 4.1.1, is used by 34%
of Android users. This version is used in “millions
of smartphones and tablets,” making many consumers vulnerable to attack.
So with the knowledge that hackers
go completely unnoticed, and leave no trace of their presence, the question
comes to mind: if using this bug to hack into vulnerable systems leaves no
trace of attack, who is to say that the government itself wasn’t ever under
attack? Intelligence services all over the world, or even stateless actors,
could have gained access national secrets, or federal employees’ identities. If
no one can trace them, how will we ever know if they were there?
In the end, if the NSA knew of the
Heartbleed Bug and did nothing to warn American citizens, it made a grave
mistake. This bug left the security of millions of people vulnerable to attack
by hackers, foreign intelligence services, and criminals. If the U.S. government
didn’t know about the bug, then what else don’t they know?
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