Security

New Relic warns customers it's experienced a cyber … something

Users told to hold tight and await instructions as investigation continues


Web tracking and analytics outfit New Relic has issued a scanty security advisory warning customers it has experienced a scary cyber something.

"We value our New Relic community and want to make our customers aware of a recent cyber security incident that we are working diligently to investigate with the support of third-party cyber security experts," reads the advisory.

The tiniest hint of the incident's nature is offered in an exhortation to "remain vigilant and monitor your account for suspicious activity" – perhaps suggesting account compromise.

No further detail has been delivered.

Indeed, in an email sent to customers and shared with The Register by a kind reader, CEO Bill Staples opened by again stating "We value that you are part of the New Relic community" before assuring "We are working around the clock to investigate and address this incident."

The Register is uncertain how to enumerate the extent to which New Relic values its community, given the paucity of information offered about the incident.

"Customers will be directly contacted if there are any specific actions required of you," the advisory states. "To be clear, if you do not hear from us, there is no action you need to take at this time." The email from Staples offers similar wording.

But neither communiqué offers a scintilla of detail to help customers understand whether they need to assign someone to hit "Download New Messages" on their preferred email client repeatedly so they don't miss important infosec advice, or can relax and wait a few days.

US-based readers about to embark on the Thanksgiving long weekend may find that approach hard to stomach – a sensation The Register understands is a holiday tradition in many households.

But we digress.

The Register asked New Relic for comment and was told "This is an ongoing investigation and the information we know and can share is in the security bulletins."

Our questions – about when the analysts learned of the incident, whether customer data was accessed, how the incident was spotted, the identity of the third-party cyber experts assisting the probe, and the timing of the announcement – were not answered. We also asked if all New Relic customers everywhere are at risk, or if the problem is confined to a certain nation or nations.

No answer was provided.

The Register operatives outside the US will keep an eye on this one while our stateside colleagues endure turkey comas. ®

Send us news
6 Comments

New Relic's cyber-something revealed as attack on staging systems, some users

Ongoing investigation found evidence of stolen employee creds and social engineering

Five Eyes nations warn Moscow's mates at the Star Blizzard gang have new phishing targets

The Russians are coming! Err, they've already infiltrated UK, US inboxes

Dump C++ and in Rust you should trust, Five Eyes agencies urge

Memory safety vulnerabilities need to be crushed with better code

Uncle Sam probes cyberattack on Pennsylvania water system by suspected Iranian crew

CISA calls for stronger IT defenses as Texas district also hit by ransomware crew

Cisco intros AI to find firewall flaws, warns this sort of thing can't be free

Predicts cyber crims will find binary brainboxes harder to battle

Polish train maker denies claims its software bricked rolling stock maintained by competitor

Says it was probably hacked, which isn't good news either

Attacks abuse Microsoft DHCP to spoof DNS records and steal secrets

Akamai says it reported the flaws to Microsoft. Redmond shrugged

Fancy Bear goes phishing in US, European high-value networks

GRU-linked crew going after our code warns Microsoft - Outlook not good

US warns Iranian terrorist crew broke into 'multiple' US water facilities

There's a war on and critical infrastructure operators are still using default passwords

Hershey phishes! Crooks snarf chocolate lovers' creds

Stealing Kit Kat maker's data?! Give me a break

Weak session keys let snoops take a byte out of your Bluetooth traffic

BLUFFS spying flaw present in iPhones, ThinkPad, plenty of chipsets

Australia building 'top secret' cloud to catch up and link with US, UK intel orgs

Plans to share 'vast amounts of data' – very carefully