Open-source software company Red Hat has confirmed a security breach on one of its GitLab instances after a threat actor claimed to have stolen nearly 570 GB of data from across various repositories.
Any theft of customer data is bad a look, but it's still unclear just how serious this incident is. Here's why.
The Register on MSN
Red Hat breach escalates as criminals collaborate on 'multi-terabyte' extortion plot
Bad guys promise not to attack customers if they get paid Red Hat's breach nightmare just got worse, as the Crimson Collective crew that claims to have ransacked its GitLab repos has joined forces ...
A maximum severity vulnerability that allows hackers to hijack GitLab accounts with no user interaction required is now under active exploitation, federal government ...
Red Hat has confirmed suffering a potentially serious data breach, but the company said it was not able to verify hacker ...
GitLab released security updates for Community Edition (CE) and Enterprise Edition (EE), fixing nine vulnerabilities, among which two critical severity ruby-saml library authentication bypass flaws.
We came across a bullish thesis on GitLab Inc. on Stay Invested’s Substack by Denis Gorbunov. In this article, we will summarize the bulls’ thesis on GTLB. GitLab Inc. 's share was trading at $47.69 ...
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