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Special Forums Cybersecurity Maybe a security problem involving Linux hosts Post 302980298 by Neo on Friday 26th of August 2016 01:11:03 AM
Old 08-26-2016
Quote:
Originally Posted by SInt
.... I hope none of you guys reacts now how most people reacted: "this guy is crazy, give him more meds" or something. I know it sounds crazy and it is crazy. But lets say my observations are correct where could the entry point be for an attacker?
Risk is based on many factors, which include:
  1. Threat
  2. Vulnerability
  3. Criticality
If I read your post correctly, it sounds like you feel like there is a threat based on your interaction with some groups on the net and your systems are vulnerable. So, the main question which remains is how critical is the Linux computer system you are worried about?

If the system is really important and a breach would amount to serious loss, then you should really consider getting a professional to help you.

If the system has nothing important running on it; then you could just rebuild it from a scratch if you are worried.

If the system has backups, you could recover the system from a backup that was from a time prior to the hacking incident being discovered.

There are lots of options and the way you move forward depending on the risk profile of the system and that depends on the intersection of the three areas I mentioned above (1) threat, (2) vulnerability and (3) criticality.

Last edited by rbatte1; 08-26-2016 at 04:28 AM.. Reason: Converted text based numbered list for formatted numbered list
This User Gave Thanks to Neo For This Post:
 

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pam_console(8)						   System Administrator's Manual					    pam_console(8)

NAME
pam_console - control permissions for users at the system console SYNOPSIS
session optional /lib/security/pam_console.so auth required /lib/security/pam_console.so DESCRIPTION
pam_console.so is designed to give users at the physical console (virtual terminals and local xdm-managed X sessions by default, but that is configurable) capabilities that they would not otherwise have, and to take those capabilities away when the are no longer logged in at the console. It provides two main kinds of capabilities: file permissions and authentication. When a user logs in at the console and no other user is currently logged in at the console, pam_console.so will change permissions and own- ership of files as described in the file /etc/security/console.perms. That user may then log in on other terminals that are considered part of the console, and as long as the user is still logged in at any one of those terminals, that user will own those devices. When the user logs out of the last terminal, the console may be taken by the next user to log in. Other users who have logged in at the console during the time that the first user was logged in will not be given ownership of the devices unless they log in on one of the terminals; having done so on any one terminal, the next user will own those devices until he or she has logged out of every terminal that is part of the physical console. Then the race can start for the next user. In practice, this is not a problem; the physical console is not gener- ally in use by many people at the same time, and pam_console.so just tries to do the right thing in weird cases. ARGUMENTS
debug turns on debugging allow_nonroot_tty gain console locks and change permissions even if the TTY's owner is not root. permsfile=filename tells pam_console.so to get its permissions database from a different file than /etc/security/console.perms fstab=filename tells pam_console.so to read the table of configured filesystems from a file other than /etc/fstab when scanning permsfile. This file is used to map directories to device names. FILES
/var/run/console.lock /var/run/console/ /etc/security/console.apps /etc/security/console.perms SEE ALSO
console.perms(5) console.apps(5) /usr/doc/pam*/html/index.html pam_console_apply(8) /usr/doc/pam*/html/index.html BUGS
Let's hope not, but if you find any, please report them via the "Bug Track" link at http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/ AUTHOR
Michael K. Johnson <johnsonm@redhat.com> Red Hat 2000/7/11 pam_console(8)
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