HP (Hewlett Packard) has admitted that its StoreVirtual storage area network (SAN) products contain a 'backdoor' that allows remote access via an administrative account. This essentially means that anyone with an account username and password meant for backdoor access will be able to log into the systems and gain access to the operating system, which is a big security hole. These backdoors are actually meant for providing remote support to customers and replaced a hard-rest button which used to be present on the hardware to factory reset the systems. HP started including a different backdoor access account into LeftHand 9.0 the custom operating system used by HP's network storage appliance. HP has promised to deliver a fix by July 19, The Register notes. The vulnerability was discovered by Technion, a blogger who first brought it to public notice and to HP's notice through its forums and pointed out that these accounts have existed since 2009. In a new communication bulletin, HP has admitted that its SAN devices have a vulnerability that could be remotely exploited to gain unauthorised access to the device. However, it has said that the backdoor entry does not offer access to the user data stored on the system. Here' s the full text of the communication:
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Saturday, 13 July 2013
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