I’ve been seeding many Foss things for years but for some reason, people keep downloading Ubuntu versions that are more than 3 years old.

Any ideas why there is always someone downloading the ancient stuff, especially Ubuntu?

158 points

I just want to say that you’re a MVP for seeding that much for that long. Lots of TBs up there - you’ve helped out a ton of people.

Thank you.

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26 points

Yes thank you so much!

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14 points

Agreed, came here to post a “thank you for your service”

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86 points
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Yes, Ubuntu 20 isn’t EOL yet. A lot of those downloads are probably IT staff or developers that are running Ubuntu servers or developing on those versions.

ETA: We still have some RHEL 7 and clones at my day job

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13 points
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got curious – 20.04 LTS still has more than a year of support left

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3 points

Seven more years of ELTS

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7 points

Yeah, should’ve remembered that before asking… Makes sense. Thanks

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56 points

This man really does have GBs of Linux ISOs

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18 points

Holy ratio

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7 points

i tought this post was going to be a “linux ISOs” joje lol

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44 points

20.04 and 22.04 were LTS versions, aka, long term support.

Any application that requires stability should run on LTS versions. Combined with Ubuntu being one of the most popular distros, makes 20.04 and 22.04 the most popular choices for anything in a home lab and many smaller business needs.

Whether you’re building a server for home DNS, or a time server for a small business, then you’re probably using Ubuntu as the base.

I think the next LTS version will be 24.04, so things might shift sometime after that.

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6 points

Correct. Naming of ubuntu is always . of release. The LTS’es are supported for four years, so when 24.04 is released, the 20.04 will be EOL

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30 points

I can give you an answer from someone who regularly downloads really old EOL versions of Ubuntu and Debian. I personally use them as part of attack and defense competitions. They are normally very close to unusable and are nearly impossible to update to a more recent or secure version. This forces my team to find creative ways to keep them working while also taking measures to isolate them as much as possible. I also use them to teach old exploits that have been patched in more recent versions, walking people through how it worked and why it existed.

It happens a lot more with Windows machines, but there might be some manufacturing systems out there that require software that won’t run on modern versions of the OS. These systems often require new manufacturing tools in order to upgrade, or they need massive overhauls that smaller companies can’t always afford.

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7 points

This forces my team to find creative ways to keep them working while also taking measures to isolate them as much as possible. I also use them to teach old exploits that have been patched in more recent versions, walking people through how it worked and why it existed.

I am interested in learning more about this. I know a fair bit about networks but exploit history and modern attack / defense strategies and server hardening are not my main specialty. Do you have any good links or resources that you can share?

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4 points

Ok so to be clear when I said team I mean a bunch of college students preparing for different ctfs, but these are some of the more helpful resources we have found:

Tryhackme: personal favorite especially for beginners Hackthebox: great for learning/practicing attacks Overthewire: another good ctf site

We try to build many of our own ctf like machines, then each person switches their machine with another person and the other person tries to secure the vulnerabilities without knowing anything about the machine. Once everyone has secured their machines we try to attack them using the notes made while setting them up. This is our step by step for that process.

  1. download an old version of a distro. (Ubuntu 14, deb 9, ect)
  2. install and setup the VM without any updates or changes to the default configuration
  3. google the distro version (Ubuntu 14.04) + vulnerabilities or exploits
  4. read through the different sites to find applications that had huge security issues on that version and begin installing some of the programs that have known exploits

So for example with Ubuntu 14.04 we know there are some Linux kernel exploits.

A quick Google search returned this exploit: https://www.exploit-db.com/exploits/43418

Using Ubuntu’s website I looked up other critical vulnerabilities and found these: https://ubuntu.com/security/cves?q=&package=&priority=critical&version=trusty&status=

From here I could add some of the packages mentioned as having exploits and then attempt to exploit them. I could also check newer versions of Ubuntu like 16 to find vulnerabilities that would also apply to older versions.

There is also Mitre’s list(s) of the most dangerous software vulnerabilities. They have one for 2023, but also a catalog of lists from previous years.

https://cwe.mitre.org/top25/archive/2023/2023_top25_list.html

Hopefully this helps!

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