LxLabs boss found hanged after vuln wipes websites(theregister.co.uk) |
LxLabs boss found hanged after vuln wipes websites(theregister.co.uk) |
The man probably put all his focus into work to run away from that huge loss of his loved ones, but when work failed, he was back at square one to face the griefing he had ignored.
Rest in peace bhai gee.
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=648788 (Hack wipes out data for 100,000 sites)
and
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=646451 (VAServ 'hacked' - all web sites and hosted VMs down)
Even when it is made easy and automatic, we still get folks asking us for help with recovering or repairing data that could easily be recovered from backups...if they actually kept backups. And, of course, secure off-site backups are almost unheard of (actually making backups secure from attackers that have root access is a pretty hard problem; or, at least, one that requires two machines).
Anyway, I've experienced it a few times in my career, and I can say with confidence that there are very few worse feelings than knowing a mistake you've made has caused someone major data loss.
Tarsnap handles this easily with restricted keyfiles. :-)
I feel for the rest of the family. I can't even begin to imagine what it feels like to lose three relatives to suicide in a such a short span of time.
Reading a bit of his blog, it also seems apparent that his father is an alcoholic and drug addict. His ego was almost certainly a defense mechanism, and that kind of thing can be brittle.
I'm confident LXLabs was still doing fine...this wasn't going to ruin the business. It's certainly not good for business to have a major security exploit, but he had plenty of customers (according to the article, something like an order of magnitude more than we currently have and we're supporting a couple of salaries), and was the sole developer. Weathering the loss of a few customers for a few months while the storm blows over wouldn't have been too difficult. People forget about security problems eventually. Obviously, security issues never made Bill Gates lose any sleep, or the man would simply never sleep.
Tragedy of Life is that you can’t commit suicide.
I just read some of his posts. Definitely a man who lived extreme.
According to this, it seems like HyperVM wasn't even the attack vector. It was merely the enabler of damage in an already exploited data center. Exploits are known to exist in HyperVM, but the case in question wasn't the result of it, if this post is to be believed.