They laughed, they cried, they tweeted.
It was one of those weekends for many in cybersecurity and IT as they canceled plans and responded to the log4j software vulnerability. A vulnerability may expose millions of networks to a simple to carry out cyberattack.
"IT security teams around the world have been burning midnight oil all weekend and will continue and this is not a weekend problem, this is a months and months from now problem," Fortress VP Tony Turner told ABC News.
And where did the cybersecurity industry turn to share its collective pain? Twitter, of course. With a long list of classic quotes and memes.
The reveal happened Friday, December 10, in part through Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency Director Jen Easterly:
"This vulnerability, which is being widely exploited by a growing set of threat actors, presents an urgent challenge to network defenders given its broad use. To be clear, this vulnerability poses a severe risk."
And Rob Joyce, the head of NSA Cyber, was also spreading the news:
From there, the announcements kept pouring out.
Minecraft warned users to secure Java versions of the game:
Amazon Web Services posted about the new cyber risk on its blog:
"This vulnerability is severe and due to the widespread adoption of Apache Log4j, its impact is large."
Cybersecurity thought leader Rob Graham even changed the tagline on his Twitter account to include "THREAT LEVEL RED - FIX YOUR LOG4J"
Marcus Hutchins, who stopped the global WannaCry ransomware attack, tweeted details about how widespread this vulnerability is, and how simple it is to take advantage of it:
Other cybersecurity professionals warned the community about what they were seeing threat actors do:
Thankfully, the cyber tweets were not all doom and gloom. Here are some of the hilarious memes, quotes, and gifs cybersecurity professionals shared about log4j:
From Sponge Bob to dumpster fires, #infosec Twitter tweeted funny things to stay sane. And some even wrote song lyrics about log4j, with a holiday twist:
And if a shiny red Rudolph nose and log4j song lyrics don't warm your heart a little bit, then the following tweets just might:
Red Team Director Rob Fuller gave cybersecurity professionals a very public thank you.
And @threrealshodan, who is in threat intelligence, tweeted that situations like this bring the community together:
And pulling the community together is a key reason SecureWorld exists as well.
And in 2022, we're planning to get together in person.
By that time, we'll expect to hear war stories about the log4j weekend and the lessons learned from this latest widespread vulnerability.