CodeQL zero to hero part 3: Security research with CodeQL
Learn how to use CodeQL for security research and improve your security research workflow.
On September 16, GitHub Security learned that threat actors were targeting GitHub users with a phishing campaign by impersonating CircleCI to harvest user credentials and two-factor codes. While GitHub itself was not affected, the campaign has impacted many victim organizations.
On September 16, GitHub Security learned that threat actors were targeting GitHub users with a phishing campaign by impersonating CircleCI to harvest user credentials and two-factor codes. While GitHub itself was not affected, the campaign has impacted many victim organizations. Today, we are sharing details of what we’ve learned to help raise awareness of this phishing campaign and protect potential future victims.
Reported versions include messages like these, which imply that a user’s CircleCI session expired and that they should log in using GitHub credentials.
Clicking the link takes the user to a phishing site that looks like the GitHub login page but steals any credentials entered. For users with TOTP-based two-factor authentication (2FA) enabled, the phishing site also relays any TOTP codes to the threat actor and GitHub in real time, allowing the threat actor to break into accounts protected by TOTP-based 2FA. Accounts protected by hardware security keys are not vulnerable to this attack.
The threat actor uses the following tactics:
Known phishing domains as of September 27, 2022:
We are sharing this today as we believe the attacks may be ongoing and action is required for customers to protect themselves.
Upon conducting our analysis, we reset passwords and removed threat actor-added credentials for impacted users, and we notified all of the known-affected users and organizations that we discovered through our analysis. If you did not receive an email notice from us, then we do not have evidence that your account and/or organization was accessed by the threat actor at this time. We suspended all identified threat actor accounts, and we will continue to monitor for malicious activity and notify new victim users and organizations as needed.
We will continue to respond to new phishing domains as we discover them. See below for more steps you can take to protect yourself from phishing.
If you believe you may have entered credentials on a phishing site:
In order to prevent phishing attacks (which collect two-factor codes) from succeeding, consider using hardware security keys or WebAuthn 2FA. Also, consider using a browser-integrated password manager to autofill passwords for familiar websites. Many commercial and open source options exist, including browser-based password management native to popular web browsers. If your password manager doesn’t recognize the website you’re visiting, it might be a phishing site.
To verify that you’re not entering credentials in a phishing site, confirm that the URL in the address bar is “https://github.com/login” and that the site’s TLS certificate is issued to GitHub, Inc.
If you’ve received phishing emails related to this phishing campaign, please contact GitHub Support with details about the sender email address and URL of the malicious site to help us respond to this issue.
The security and trustworthiness of GitHub and the broader developer ecosystem is our highest priority. Our investigation is ongoing, and we will continue to remediate and notify affected users as needed.