Home Depot exposed access to internal systems for a year, says researcher


A security researcher said Home Depot exposed access to its internal systems for a year after one of its employees published a private access token online, likely by mistake. The researcher found the exposed token and tried to privately alert Home Depot to its security lapse but was ignored for several weeks. 

The exposure is now fixed after TechCrunch contacted company representatives last week.

Security researcher Ben Zimmermann told TechCrunch that, in early November, he found a published GitHub access token belonging to a Home Depot employee, which was exposed sometime in early 2024. 

When he tested the token, Zimmermann said that it granted access to hundreds of private Home Depot source code repositories hosted on GitHub and allowed the ability to modify their contents. 

The researcher said the keys allowed access to Home Depot’s cloud infrastructure, including its order fulfillment and inventory management systems, and code development pipelines, among other systems. Home Depot has hosted much of its developer and engineering infrastructure on GitHub since 2015, according to a customer profile on GitHub’s website.

Zimmermann said he sent several emails to Home Depot but didn’t hear back. 

Nor did he get a response from Home Depot’s chief information security officer, Chris Lanzilotta, after sending a message over LinkedIn.

Zimmermann told TechCrunch that he has disclosed several similar exposures in recent months to companies, which have thanked him for his findings. 

“Home Depot is the only company that ignored me,” he said.

Given that Home Depot does not have a way to report security flaws, such as a vulnerability disclosure or bug bounty program, Zimmermann contacted TechCrunch in an effort to get the exposure fixed.

When reached by TechCrunch on December 5, Home Depot spokesperson George Lane acknowledged receipt of our email but did not respond to follow-up emails asking for comment. The exposed token is no longer online, and the researcher said the token’s access was revoked soon after our outreach.

We also asked Lane if Home Depot has the technical means, such as logs, to determine if anyone else used the token during the months it was left online to access any of Home Depot’s internal systems. We did not hear back.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    Apple’s Trio of AI Wearables Could Arrive as Soon as Next Year

    It seems like every big tech company is getting its feet into the AI wearables game, and Apple is joining in. According to reliable Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman, a trio…

    Piggyback’s fantastic Metroid Prime art book is nearly 20 percent off

    Metroid Prime 4: Beyond launched on the Nintendo Switch and Switch 2 in December, but if you’re itching for some more lore, Metroid Prime 1–3: A Visual Retrospective is a…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Hyper Scape lives! Or at least it might, if one group of folks seeking to revive the game can get it working

    Hyper Scape lives! Or at least it might, if one group of folks seeking to revive the game can get it working

    Alberto Tomba Was an ’80s Icon. The Olympics Have Brought Him Back.

    B.C.'s Svante eyes Alberta as next big carbon capture market

    B.C.'s Svante eyes Alberta as next big carbon capture market

    Canadian curlers are being accused of ‘double-touching.’ But what’s the advantage?

    Canadian curlers are being accused of ‘double-touching.’ But what’s the advantage?

    Here’s Why You Have To Go Downstairs To Use The Lavatory On The Airbus A340-600

    Here’s Why You Have To Go Downstairs To Use The Lavatory On The Airbus A340-600

    People who switched to cannabis drinks cut their alcohol use nearly in half

    People who switched to cannabis drinks cut their alcohol use nearly in half