Storm Worm Rising
The Storm worm has been an increasing problem in the last few months, but a change in tactics may mean something big is going to happen. The article discusses a bit of back story about the worm, including the somewhat frightening numbers about the millions of spam emails carrying the worm payload. They estimate between a quarter and a million infected systems usable for spam or DDOS attacks.
As the publisher of two fairly popular websites, this is something to worry about. Recently all our sites spread across a few dedicated servers in one data center were down. Not because of a direct DDOS attack, but because of a peripheral attack which swamped the network infrastructure at the center. Really, if these guys decided to do more frequent DDOS attacks, anyone could be a target and calling the FBI is cold comfort since in the meantime your sites are down and out.
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I dunno - maybe this is what we need ~ a botnet big enough to do some real damage could actually catalyze some public awareness. Imagine if they DDoS'd MS, or Amazon, heck, Google? Maybe these guys (esp. Google) could handle this kind of slamming, but they've got lobbyists now. I really wouldn't mind seeing a well-funded FBI task force with the express purpose of rooting out botnets and going after their creators. Yeah, yeah, most of them are not on US soil. I know. However, imagine legislation that actually required the disconnection of infected bots from an ISP until it was cleaned, and a public awareness campaign that painted users who allow this to happen as idiots, and the ISPs as protectors of the rest of the internet users. Most people are concerned that there would be a backlash against the ISPs and they would stop complying for fear of loss of business, but that's where the legislation comes in. It's a quarantine situation - just like IRL, if you've got something nasty and contagious, the CDC can legally quarantine (forcibly, if you're an idiot like the TB guy) you because you're endangering the lives of others by going out and exposing them. Same thing here - don't give the botnets a chance to expand, cut them off, force a windows-cleaning (ISPs could offer a cleanup disk, $5.95 plus tax, or something, to help make it worth it for them - don't want to hurt the small ISPs, even though I think TW and the rest are bastards), and let them reconnect afterwards. Simple, painless, and will definitely make sure people learn their lesson for next time.
Try password protecting your zip file.
This is a sig. It is like every other sig in the world, except that it is mine, and it is different.
Let's look at DDoS attacks.
#1. Spoofed IP addresses - not that common anymore. It used to be that you'd tie up a machine by having it send replies to machines that did not initiate the connection. There is a simple solution to this. Anyone assigned a block of IP addresses has to make sure that all outbound traffic references IP addresses on that block.
#2. Thousands of machines eating up your bandwidth - the most common type now. This is where the zombie army each makes continued requests of your machine. For webservers, they can request a page over and over and over until they use up all your bandwidth and legitimate visitors cannot get through. This is more difficult to fix. It can partially be handled by blocking the range of addresses that host the zombies. Such as Comcast and Verizon and so forth. There are more complicated attacks. Such has sending half a request.
There's not much that can be done with #2 until a law gets passed saying that the person paying for the Internet connection is responsible for $X of clean-up charges. Then people will have a financial incentive to look at more secure systems.
More accurate, perhaps, to say that they think this is just the way computers don't work.
There was a program on last week where they had a collection of self proclaimed grumpy old women listing things they hated about computers - and you know what? Every single complaint was not about computers per se, but about Microsoft software.
There's got to be an opportunity in there somewhere for the FOSS movement. Imagine if we could convince the "I hate computers" brigade that what they mainly hate is Microsoft ...
That's just silly. People have different convincer strategies. If nothing else, there are people out there who still haven't heard that there's an alternative. There's a lot of meat left on that bone.
Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
It's well-known that the Chinese government has an active computer warfare department. A botnet on this scale is way beyond anything needed for mere industrial blackmail. But if you wanted to bring down large chunks of some nation's Internet quickly, without the attack coming from an obvious (and blockable) source, this would be a great weapon. Let's say you wanted to disable the Internet in Taiwan, or South Korea, or Japan, or all three, just prior to military action. Or let's say you wanted to disrupt financial markets to be sure that your intentional crashing of the dollar had maximal effects.
"with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Storm_Worm I'm interested in something from that wikipedia article; it mentions that the source code to storm specifically avoids infecting Windows Server 2003 boxes. Anyone know why the author would go out of his way to not hit 2K3 boxes?
Perhaps to avoid infecting government servers (and upping the ante, if he got caught)? That's the only thing I could think of. I'm sure there's a very logical reason, but I have no idea what it might be.
If I mod you up, it doesn't necessarily mean I agree with what you've said, sorry.
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Wishing you the best, Administrator, americangreetings.comDo you realize the kind of productivity spike we could get if the 'net was down for, say, a week? One day would be lost to people trying to get back up, admittedly, but then we'd all just start doing work, checking the 'net connection more and more infrequently. After a week, we'd probably run out of work on our desks that didn't need internet lookups, though most of us still have paper catalogs around so it wouldn't be a total loss. Faxing would get popular again, as would phones and voicemail...but no outside IM and email to deal with.
I'm going to call it a net win for productivity and busniess in general. Which means that it's most likely that big business is behind the internet shutdown...and the Storm worm.
Shit, where'd I put that damned tinfoil hat...
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?