• vldszn an hour ago

    GitHub: "We are investigating unauthorized access to GitHub’s internal repositories. While we currently have no evidence of impact to customer information stored outside of GitHub’s internal repositories (such as our customers’ enterprises, organizations, and repositories), we are closely monitoring our infrastructure for follow-on activity."

    • TZubiri 17 minutes ago

      It reminds me of the famous "mistakes were made" Nixon quote.

      "We are investigating unauthorized access" sounds much better than "we've been hacked"

      • vldszn 2 minutes ago

        Exactly =)

    • keyle 29 minutes ago

      This is bad. If they came out announcing this, without a long winded explanation and further details, it's because they're staring at a bottomless pit and they haven't put the lid on it yet.

      For a Fortune 100, to go out of your way to spook investors is the least desirable approach.

      • eli 16 minutes ago

        Letting people know promptly is also the right thing to do and probably mandated by (at least some) customer contracts. You can't tell just some people; it would leak anyway.

      • dijksterhuis an hour ago
        • killingtime74 21 minutes ago

          Time to switch to Gitlab, Bitbucket or self-hosted

          • MallocVoidstar 22 minutes ago

            https://pbs.twimg.com/media/HItbXhvW4AAMD8W?format=jpg&name=...

            All of their repos have been copied and are up for sale. Attackers are TeamPCP, the creators of the Shai-Hulud malware.

            • waynesonfire an hour ago

              Are they required to announce that they're being hacked in real time?

              • tonetegeatinst an hour ago

                Microsoft owned so many a CYA to explain why the liability insurance goes up to investors?

              • mstank 2 hours ago

                Is it just me or is this happening way more frequently in the last 4 or 5 months? Coincidently around the same time the models got a lot more capable?

                • tom_ an hour ago

                  It's more likely that it isn't coincidental at all: software development-oriented LLMs became a lot better towards the end of 2025, and so there's a non-zero chance that people are using them to find new security exploits.

                  (People are not sleeping on this and it is not something people have failed to notice. I don't use LLMs at all and even I have noticed it - largely because there is approximately nobody that isn't talking about it.)

                  • tptacek 5 minutes ago

                    There is a 100% chance that people are using LLMs to find vulnerabilities and build exploits. If it was possible for something to be a 101% chance, that's what it would be.

                  • bob1029 2 hours ago

                    I think it's more about the popularity than the capability. The chances you might accidentally put a Github access token into an undesired security context goes up dramatically when you actually create and use one on a regular basis. The developers at GH are certainly using these tools just like the rest of us.

                  • syngrog66 an hour ago

                    between all the Linux LPEs and Claude's known security flaws, alone, I'd be shocked if Github and Microsoft hadnt gotten hacked by now. reasonable bet we mainly hear it when big shops get bit

                    • TZubiri 14 minutes ago

                      Before 2026 I hosted client code on GitHub, now it feels suboptimal, code is both an intellectual property asset and security risk. Especially if the company is software based, self-hosting your code just has a much better risk profile for almost no cost.

                      It's also one of those things that warms your team up and gets them ready for actual work, a team that has to self host their git and other infra, like self-hosting DNS servers with bind, will have a much better work ethic than engineers who click buttons on a SaaS and conflate their role as users of a system instead of admins of one.

                      Additionally, using github actions, and relying on Pull Requests (Tm) (R) (C) has always been (useful) vendor lock in (and a security risk in case of GH Actions). It wasn't enough to lock down a choice, but it tilts the balance in favour of less dependencies, which with the increase of CVEs and supply chain vulns, seems to be the name of the game for this new era. Build it in house, ignore the dogma.

                      • runeb a few seconds ago

                        By self-hosting code you have successfully replaced 1 of 30 things organizations rely on github for. And now your team is busy fixing bugs in bespoke setups and being on-call for a vital micro-service that will block your whole company if it is down at all.

                    • kiernanmcgowan 2 hours ago

                      Mythos has broken containment

                      • vldszn 2 hours ago

                        - Use Static analysis for GHA to catch security issues: https://github.com/zizmorcore/zizmor

                        - set locally: pnpm config set minimum-release-age 4320 # 3 days in minutes https://pnpm.io/supply-chain-security for other package managers check: https://gist.github.com/mcollina/b294a6c39ee700d24073c0e5a4e...

                        - add Socket Free Firewall when installing npm packages on CI https://docs.socket.dev/docs/socket-firewall-free#github-act...

                        • keyle 32 minutes ago

                          The only way to 'harden your github actions' is to not use github actions.

                          • vldszn 3 minutes ago

                            Makes sense tbh :)

                          • benoau 2 hours ago

                            You also need to make sure you take care using PR titles and descriptions in your GHA because if they contain `text` it will be executed lmfao.

                        • tiffanyh 10 minutes ago

                          Is Twitter/X really the right channel to announce a security event like this?

                          I ask because I don’t see anything posted on their official blog or status page.

                          https://github.blog/

                          https://www.githubstatus.com/

                          • cebert 9 minutes ago

                            It’s a very popular messaging platform for tech enthusiasts.