this post was submitted on 18 Jun 2026
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The scale shows dedication (and deep pockets). The methods used - apart from the recursive dictionary attacks - were pretty mundane, as far as the report goes.
Shouldn't these fairly unsophisticated "spray-and-pray" brute force attempts show up in logs and at least alert security personnel that an active attack was underway?
Again, not particularly sophisticated, but supported by heavy machinery to burn energy and money to do the actual work. Again, I ask: shouldn't these types of attempts be mitigated by sufficiently long hashes? Even a 45-GPU cluster can be exhausted by hash length, can't it?
Oh they absolutely show up in logs. And if they're half competent, this also would cause MFA prompts to users... And lockouts... So IT tickets too.
Yet...
There's often no MFA configured for infrastructure because teams don't want to bother and think their own stuff is secure.
What it should definitely cause is SIEM alerts.
*crickets*
Especially for a company that specialises in cybersecurity, yikes.