| Update:
I misunderstood, I'm sorry. I wasn't trying to attack but trying to show my concern because I thought he saved some id/keys for himself. Please ignore my comment below. -- "Still managed to get a few dozen AWS keys though" Good for you! What a nice person you are. Please abuse more small projects like this. Even if they say they say it was "was only meant for friends to test out". Oh I see, you just found a security hole and trying to get some reputation? Cute. Please do it by abusing the small power you found and hurting innocent users. That's really, really nice of you. "Still managed to get a few dozen AWS keys though" Wow. Just wow. You sir, just ruined my night. Thank you. Ps. I am really concerned about your company and its users. If you can do something like this, I wonder what else you could do (or doing) at your current company. I hope, I'm assuming wrong. edit: "the" ยป "your". last paragraph. |
1. I didn't disclose how to do it, merely that it was possible.
2. By "get" I in no way mean harvested. I just manually incremented the ID in the URL by hand in my web browser to see how many users could be affected.
3. Since I never saved any of the information (just viewed the pages) I no longer have it since the flaw was patched.
Nothing malicious was done.