Zeus Botnet Down But Not Out
harryjohnston writes "The Register points out that the takedown of a significant number of Zeus command-and-control servers, which we discussed earlier, was a short-lived victory, as about one-third of the affected servers were back on the net in less than 48 hours." Adds itwbennet: "Just hours after network connectivity to Troyak was severed the ISP peered with a new upstream Internet service provider named Ya. The next step will be to 'de-peer' Troyak from its new service provider, either an ISP named Nassist or its upstream provider, Hurricane Electric, said a researcher familiar with the matter. 'We have taken some of their territory, they are trying to out flank us,' the researcher said via IM. 'We are going to win this one — we have 'em boxed in.'"
How much are they charging per month for use of a command-and-control server? Can I host my e-commerce site on Zeus?
Do you have to share the command and control server with other users? Or do they have a "private command server" option?
(On a side note- will twittering help my business?)
Aparently if your father had encased something else in rubber, we wouldn't have to listen to your drivel...
Science advances one funeral at a time- Max Planck
This is actually informative. Botnets are the very model of enterprise redundant high-availability. The technology is remarkable in its resilience. You could wipe out Europe and Asia with dual asteroids, and the thing would keep going.
If you want to keep your enterprise up no matter what happens then you need to be prepared for a headshot. They are, and it's not enough to bring them down. How prepared are you?
Help stamp out iliturcy.
MalwareBytes is shockingly good at malware removal. Theres almost nothing else like it.
Also, dump Symantec and McAfee crapware for Microsoft Security Essentials or something like NOD32.
Symantec and McAfee no longer keep up with viruses. Every day I'm doing janitor on systems with Symantec Endpoint. I transfer the viruses from the infected machines to my own to submit them to Microsoft...but then Security Essentials picks them up. Symantec has no clue.