Re: Internet attack called broad and long lasting
> > I agree. But I saw, how hackers intruded into XXX agency (USA's, I mean) 6 > > years ago. Cisco sources never was a great secret > > Then you shouldn't be talking about it. I mean - such things was common even 6 years ago. There was (always) some level of rooted servers, some level of teen hackers, some level of compromised passwords. Absolutely nothing new. If you (like Cisco) have a wide cooperation, are big, and decided (reasonably) do not sacrify in productivity because of paranoiic security - you have some risk of be intruded. It just means _use simple, sometimes primitive, but effective measures for additional protection_. Host based IDS-es on ALL (ALL) servers, single time passwords for everything, non standard ports - at least one of such list (teher are much more on the list). > Okay, so if it is a Good Thing for competitors and a Bad Thing for Cisco > which is a commercial company with a vested interest in not giving away > their secrets to competitors, how is this not a major loss? _EVEN_ if > only in reputation? No, exclude reputation from my list - I did not estimated it. 100% agree about reputation. But cisco's reputation is not major thing for anyone outside of Cisco. I underplay it because it is overplayed by the media. If (IF!) cisco code had not backdoors from developers (and I believe, it had not), then this particular event is major for Cisco, but minor for the rest of the world (even for competitors). You can not do much with this code, except if you are Cisco or are contrafacting Cisco's as a clone - it (as any such code) require the whole infrastructure around to be used. (It's as egg cell - we need a whole women around to get use of it). > > It is amazing. Cisco made a lot of noice about IDS, IPS, etc etc while > > no one in reality need these super expansive and > > complex tools (except few dozens of companies under the DDOS risk); but > > IDS.. IPS.. etc.. etc... DDoS risk? > > I can agree with many on the complete uselessness of IDS for most > companies (I can't live without it!).. IPS systems are a different matter. > > > missed so simple thing as ssh exploit in their own nest. (It is not > > harmless - we found ssh trojan on my previous job, just exactly the same > > Let me Google you and find where you worked. :o) Ok, but we do few simpler measures (sometimes on 0 cost) which dramatically decrease a chance of intrusions, and other measures to prevent any chance of intrusion into important areas. And we do not forget to patch 'ssh' and 'ssl' (after all -:)). IDS and IPS are good, if you have it on _EVERYTHING_ (which means, btw, that they can not be very expensive because you will never be able to use expensive tool on _everything_) and, most important, main IDS and IPS have brand names _cluefull admin and cluefull manager_. But we got aside. My point for this forum was _do not overestimate real harm from this Cisco sources leak_. It is almost harmless (except for repuation) vs consumer data leaks, consumer password's leaks, consumer OS exploits, medical data leaks and so on. If someone get control on ISP xxx routers - trust me, it will happen because he found admin passwords and because clueless admin allowed in-band access from Internet, or because NOC's server was compromised - but not because someone had Cisco sources. > > >>Burrowing from that, if the attack is successful, and the loss is > >>significant, I think the way there - although cute, is irrelevant except > > > > I mean _MINOR_ because lost was minor, in reality. No because it was ssh > > exploit. > > Okay, I still don't follow you. I don't mean to be annoying but I really > don't. Let's not move too much into the realm of security and stay in > net ops. > > How is this not a loss and not a risk? If we can't reach an agreement I > suggest we take this off-list. Because it is useless for hackers, except if Cisco have a backdoors and embedded trojans. And (most important) because it distract NOC's and security guys from securing NOC's, access pathes to the routers, use changable passwords and so on. Simple question - do you control all changes on your routers and firewalls? I mean - something like CCR system (which sends daily change reports) or Cisco Works (as I know, do the same)? How often do you change enable passwords? Is it enough for intruder to set up sniffer in the NOC, steal password, then loging and change config (and be unnoticed)? > > Gadi.
Re: Internet attack called broad and long lasting
On Thu, 12 May 2005 01:30:36 PDT, Alexei Roudnev said: > It is mostly fantasy. DNS security is much much more important and much more > real issue, vs this fictions. Very true, but Sites that have their routers tied down right tend to get the DNS right too, and sites that are lax with the routers tend towards botching the DNS too. Remember - the single *biggest* chunk is that the people in charge have to make a conscious decision that "tying stuff down tight is important". Once that happens, routers and DNS and customer-tracking all usually fall into place. And if they haven't decided that a large bucket full of security-kloo is needed, you *WILL* end up calling them and saying "Did your XYZ get hacked?". Which piece of gear is XYZ this week is mostly random chance and the phase of the moon (For a *LONG* time, the single *biggest* easy-to-check predictor of "is this machine a spam source?" wasn't the various RBLSs, but whether they had a PTR for the IP. The same sort of sites that can't/don't get their PTRs in order (even to the point of a generic 'a.b.c.d.in-addr.arpa PTR d.c.b.a.ISP.net') are the same sort that can't check a new customer against ROKSO or find and neutralize a spam-zombie PC. pgpuw9qod9vTT.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: Internet attack called broad and long lasting
Alexei Roudnev wrote: >>>*Your* boxes may be hardened beyond all belief and plausibility, but > > you're > >>>*STILL* screwed if some teenaged kid on another continent has more > > effective > >>>control of the router at the other end of your OC-48 than the NOC monkey > > you > >>>call when things get wonky > > It is mostly fantasy. DNS security is much much more important and much more > real issue, vs this fictions. > If talking about Cisco, we have much more worries about chained bugs, vs > teens controlled OC-48 routers... > > I mean - it is _real_, but it is far behind _much more realistic_ problems. You should listen to Vladis, he knows what he is talking about. There have always and will always (sigh) be bugs. However, as people keep saying... guns don't kill people, people kill people.
Re: Internet attack called broad and long lasting
> I agree. But I saw, how hackers intruded into XXX agency (USA's, I mean) 6 > years ago. Cisco sources never was a great secret Then you shouldn't be talking about it. > (a lot of people saw them; they are almost useless without Cisco's > infrastructure; they are interesting for competitors > in some cases, because of very interesting technical ideas, but not for the > hackers). It is _MINOR_ in reality. Major can be, > for example, stealing 100,000 credit card numbers, because it make sence for > 100, 000 people. Just Cisco sources... hmm, 100 total people in the world > will be affected, big deal...) Okay, so if it is a Good Thing for competitors and a Bad Thing for Cisco which is a commercial company with a vested interest in not giving away their secrets to competitors, how is this not a major loss? _EVEN_ if only in reputation? Sorry, but I really don't understand why you keep trying to under-play this from different angles, and am just trying to understand your meaning. > But I agree - it just showed old truth - good security is not technical > issue. Just simplerst _never use standard ports_ policy could prevent this > case. Better, _use One Time Passwords and single point signature_. Primitive > host based IDS (Osiris, for example). Any _real_ security policy, of course > (or better, ACCESS policy, because security is nothing - ACCESS mater! No > access required - no security issues...) It's not a technical issue, yet you just told me how to do security in detail. > It is amazing. Cisco made a lot of noice about IDS, IPS, etc etc while > no one in reality need these super expansive and > complex tools (except few dozens of companies under the DDOS risk); but IDS.. IPS.. etc.. etc... DDoS risk? I can agree with many on the complete uselessness of IDS for most companies (I can't live without it!).. IPS systems are a different matter. > missed so simple thing as ssh exploit in their own nest. (It is not > harmless - we found ssh trojan on my previous job, just exactly the same Let me Google you and find where you worked. :o) > case - ssh opened to Internet, port #22! Since this, I never allow ssh on > port 22, Terminal Service on port 3389, managemen t web on port 80 or 443, > and so on... /even when servcie is allowed, which is policy issue/... And I'll port-scan you to find out what port you are running SSH on, as it is open to the net. >>Burrowing from that, if the attack is successful, and the loss is >>significant, I think the way there - although cute, is irrelevant except > > I mean _MINOR_ because lost was minor, in reality. No because it was ssh > exploit. Okay, I still don't follow you. I don't mean to be annoying but I really don't. Let's not move too much into the realm of security and stay in net ops. How is this not a loss and not a risk? If we can't reach an agreement I suggest we take this off-list. Gadi.
Re: Internet attack called broad and long lasting
> > *Your* boxes may be hardened beyond all belief and plausibility, but you're > > *STILL* screwed if some teenaged kid on another continent has more effective > > control of the router at the other end of your OC-48 than the NOC monkey you > > call when things get wonky It is mostly fantasy. DNS security is much much more important and much more real issue, vs this fictions. If talking about Cisco, we have much more worries about chained bugs, vs teens controlled OC-48 routers... I mean - it is _real_, but it is far behind _much more realistic_ problems.
Re: Internet attack called broad and long lasting
> Alexei Roudnev wrote: > > O, my god. Primitive hack, primitive ssh exploit I watched it all 6 > > years ago, bnothing changed since this. > > > > It is _minor_ incident, in reality. > > Primitive I can understand, but _minor_? > > First, I don't really see why an attack should be estimated by the tool > used. If a 10 years old exploit would work, why should an attacker look > for and use a 0day? It's silly allocation of resources. I agree. But I saw, how hackers intruded into XXX agency (USA's, I mean) 6 years ago. Cisco sources never was a great secret (a lot of people saw them; they are almost useless without Cisco's infrastructure; they are interesting for competitors in some cases, because of very interesting technical ideas, but not for the hackers). It is _MINOR_ in reality. Major can be, for example, stealing 100,000 credit card numbers, because it make sence for 100, 000 people. Just Cisco sources... hmm, 100 total people in the world will be affected, big deal...) But I agree - it just showed old truth - good security is not technical issue. Just simplerst _never use standard ports_ policy could prevent this case. Better, _use One Time Passwords and single point signature_. Primitive host based IDS (Osiris, for example). Any _real_ security policy, of course (or better, ACCESS policy, because security is nothing - ACCESS mater! No access required - no security issues...) It is amazing. Cisco made a lot of noice about IDS, IPS, etc etc while no one in reality need these super expansive and complex tools (except few dozens of companies under the DDOS risk); but missed so simple thing as ssh exploit in their own nest. (It is not harmless - we found ssh trojan on my previous job, just exactly the same case - ssh opened to Internet, port #22! Since this, I never allow ssh on port 22, Terminal Service on port 3389, managemen t web on port 80 or 443, and so on... /even when servcie is allowed, which is policy issue/... > > Burrowing from that, if the attack is successful, and the loss is > significant, I think the way there - although cute, is irrelevant except I mean _MINOR_ because lost was minor, in reality. No because it was ssh exploit. > for the defender. > > Gadi.
Re: Internet attack called broad and long lasting
On Wed, 11 May 2005 16:59:56 +0400, Gadi Evron said: > Well, I suppose it's not really a great idea to wait until things get > wonky to establish good and operational relations with your uplink. Fortunately for me, we've got such good operational relations with our primary uplink that I don't even have to go outside to get to their NOC. ;) The problem is that for most sites, "good operational relations with the uplink" isn't 100% congruent to "uplink has their security act together". As a result, you get to have the "Hello, Uplink? You guys get hacked?" "Umm.. yeah" phone call... pgpCLP7RrGNqE.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: Internet attack called broad and long lasting
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: [snip] Hi Vladis! > Actually, it *is* relevant for the "rest of us". > > Given the number of boxen that got whacked, and the number of sites involved, > "the defender" *is* "the rest of us", and "we as an industry" obviously need > to get our collective act in gear. Remember - Which is exactly my point... People keep worrying about 0days, when I'd only start worrying about them once I made sure that current (old) and known vulns can't get me. Once they are inside, it doesn't matter how they got in until a later time when you do forensics and try to make sure it doesn't happen again, which is what I referred to as the defender side. Fact is, the break in was serious because serious data was stolen.. so why should the fact it was an old vuln distract us from that except for perhaps reintroduce the facts that people simply don't do enough security and/or best practices, which we already knew? > *Your* boxes may be hardened beyond all belief and plausibility, but you're > *STILL* screwed if some teenaged kid on another continent has more effective > control of the router at the other end of your OC-48 than the NOC monkey you > call when things get wonky Well, I suppose it's not really a great idea to wait until things get wonky to establish good and operational relations with your uplink. Gadi.
Re: Internet attack called broad and long lasting
On Wed, 11 May 2005 13:44:22 +0300, Gadi Evron said: > First, I don't really see why an attack should be estimated by the tool > used. If a 10 years old exploit would work, why should an attacker look > for and use a 0day? It's silly allocation of resources. > > Burrowing from that, if the attack is successful, and the loss is > significant, I think the way there - although cute, is irrelevant except > for the defender. Actually, it *is* relevant for the "rest of us". Given the number of boxen that got whacked, and the number of sites involved, "the defender" *is* "the rest of us", and "we as an industry" obviously need to get our collective act in gear. Remember - *Your* boxes may be hardened beyond all belief and plausibility, but you're *STILL* screwed if some teenaged kid on another continent has more effective control of the router at the other end of your OC-48 than the NOC monkey you call when things get wonky pgp3Buvm8eZyB.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: Internet attack called broad and long lasting
Alexei Roudnev wrote: O, my god. Primitive hack, primitive ssh exploit I watched it all 6 years ago, bnothing changed since this. It is _minor_ incident, in reality. Primitive I can understand, but _minor_? First, I don't really see why an attack should be estimated by the tool used. If a 10 years old exploit would work, why should an attacker look for and use a 0day? It's silly allocation of resources. Burrowing from that, if the attack is successful, and the loss is significant, I think the way there - although cute, is irrelevant except for the defender. Gadi.
Re: Internet attack called broad and long lasting
O, my god. Primitive hack, primitive ssh exploit I watched it all 6 years ago, bnothing changed since this. It is _minor_ incident, in reality. - Original Message - From: "Sean Donelan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: Sent: Monday, May 09, 2005 10:32 PM Subject: NYT: Internet attack called broad and long lasting > > > Internet Attack Called Broad and Long Lasting by Investigators > By JOHN MARKOFF and LOWELL BERGMAN > > Published: May 10, 2005 > > SAN FRANCISCO, May 9 - The incident seemed alarming enough: a breach of a > Cisco Systems network in which an intruder seized programming instructions > for many of the computers that control the flow of the Internet. > > [...] > See the New York Times for the rest of the story. >
RE: Internet Attack Called Broad and Long Lasting by Investigators
On Tue, 2005-05-10 at 10:24 -1000, Scott Weeks wrote: > Don't give folks that have access to machines that hold sensitive > info the ability to download software unless you know they're savvy > enough to do so safely. I don't see that as root of the problem. To me the real problem is in the use and handling of usernames and passwords. Take your typical contractor or SE (i use to be one) they have usernames and passwords for their corporate systems as well as customer systems. OK, so they may be careful who they share those credentials with, but they aren't careful enough with how they use those credentials themselves. I wish I had a nickle for every time I've seen a person assume everything was a-ok since they were using ssh, even though they couldn't have told you who installed ssh (or the remote sshd) on the systems. So, the SE ssh's into *your* corporate systems using ssh on their laptop (probably d/l'ed by googling for PuTTY or SSH and pulling the first available URL) while on a service call to your facility. Or how about the SE who ssh's into *their* corporate network from some rogue contractor box inside your network. Then there are those people who run bleeding edge O/Ses that constantly update from god-only-knows-where servers all over the world... what version of ssh is installed today? And there are those co-workers who "think" they know what they are doing but really don't. Ever dropped a BSOD screensaver on to a co-workers computer, dropping a bogus ssh executable is even easier. Use LDAP? Isn't it nice having one username and password for *all* things? The l33t [ch]4ck3rs love LDAP credentials. Your SSH password is the same as your IMAP/SMTP/POP3/HTTP/RDP password. In short: people need to not only respect their login credentials, they need to only use them from trusted systems and constantly be vigilant about the level of trust they have for those systems. DON'T mix usernames and passwords between differing classifications of systems. -Jim P.
RE: Internet Attack Called Broad and Long Lasting by Investigators
: Eventhough this article wasn't specifically regarding network operations, it : does come down to the most fundamental of network operating practices. : Create policies and the procedures that enable those policies. Then enforce : them VERY strictly. : Folks that handle sensitive info (proprietary code, personal info, HIPPA : FERPA, SOX, .mil, etc, etc) should be allowed to download software only from : company servers where all software has been cleared by folks that're experts : in evaluating software packages. Not from the general internet. On Tue, 10 May 2005, Scott Morris wrote: : Closing people's systems down from "any" other software installations isn't : necessarily the solution. It can delay progress in many cases, and not : everyone has IT staff that may be as up to speed as necessary. Ok, for smaller companies, yes. You have to trade off productivity and risk. But in a smaller company you will likely know each individual and their level of tech savvy. Red flags should pop up if they have a low level of understanding, have access to machines with sensitive or proprietary info and have the permission level to install software. Also, in this case we're talking Cisco, NASA, .mil networks and research labs. They have the ability to enforce policy and the need to be VERY risk adverse WRT losing sensitive data. In organizations that size, it's the enforement that's hard to pull off. It requires strict policy definition and procedure adherence. Don't give folks that have access to machines that hold sensitive info the ability to download software unless you know they're savvy enough to do so safely. If you do allow the less savvy folks whom have access to sensitive machines to install software, force the packages to be downloaded from a company repository. : The requirement should be more along the lines of software designed to scan : the system for things like that and alert/remove it. That kind of : requirement at least gives flexibility and a good kick in the butt to : implement good assessment tools at the PC or network level. In the article, it was too late by that time. The data was compromised. They didn't trade off risk and productivity well, or didn't enforce policy through procedure, or... : All it takes is one user outside the "norm" to mess up LOTS of work and : policies trying to keep things right! Anyone with access to machines that hold sensitive material should be held to a higher standard than the rest of the organization. You risk losing your treasure through these people. scott
RE: Internet Attack Called Broad and Long Lasting by Investigators
Closing people's systems down from "any" other software installations isn't necessarily the solution. It can delay progress in many cases, and not everyone has IT staff that may be as up to speed as necessary. The requirement should be more along the lines of software designed to scan the system for things like that and alert/remove it. That kind of requirement at least gives flexibility and a good kick in the butt to implement good assessment tools at the PC or network level. All it takes is one user outside the "norm" to mess up LOTS of work and policies trying to keep things right! Scott -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Scott Weeks Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2005 2:16 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Internet Attack Called Broad and Long Lasting by Investigators Eventhough this article wasn't specifically regarding network operations, it does come down to the most fundamental of network operating practices. Create policies and the procedures that enable those policies. Then enforce them VERY strictly. The crucial element in the password thefts that provided access at Cisco and elsewhere was the intruder's use of a corrupted version of a standard software program, SSH. The intruder probed computers for vulnerabilities that allowed the installation of the corrupted program, known as a Trojan horse In the Cisco case, the passwords to Cisco computers were sent from a compromised computer by a legitimate user unaware of the Trojan horse Folks that handle sensitive info (proprietary code, personal info, HIPPA FERPA, SOX, .mil, etc, etc) should be allowed to download software only from company servers where all software has been cleared by folks that're experts in evaluating software packages. Not from the general internet. scott
Re: Internet Attack Called Broad and Long Lasting by Investigators
This part: "The crucial element in the password thefts that provided access at Cisco and elsewhere was the intruder's use of a corrupted version of a standard software program, SSH. The program is used in many computer research centers for a variety of tasks, ranging from administration of remote computers to data transfer over the Internet." reminds me of the SourceForge attack a few years back http://www.apache.de/info/20010519-hack.html -Jim P. On Mon, 2005-05-09 at 22:37 -0700, Steven M. Bellovin wrote: > SAN FRANCISCO, May 9 - The incident seemed alarming enough: a breach > of a Cisco Systems network in which an intruder seized programming > instructions for many of the computers that control the flow of > the Internet. > > Now federal officials and computer security investigators have > acknowledged that the Cisco break-in last year was only part of a > more extensive operation - involving a single intruder or a small > band, apparently based in Europe - in which thousands of computer > systems were similarly penetrated. > > > > > http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/10/technology/10cisco.html?hp&ex=1115784000&en=eeb27da2e75ec022&ei=5094&partner=homepage > > > --Prof. Steven M. Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb > >
Re: Internet Attack Called Broad and Long Lasting by Investigators
Eventhough this article wasn't specifically regarding network operations, it does come down to the most fundamental of network operating practices. Create policies and the procedures that enable those policies. Then enforce them VERY strictly. The crucial element in the password thefts that provided access at Cisco and elsewhere was the intruder's use of a corrupted version of a standard software program, SSH. The intruder probed computers for vulnerabilities that allowed the installation of the corrupted program, known as a Trojan horse In the Cisco case, the passwords to Cisco computers were sent from a compromised computer by a legitimate user unaware of the Trojan horse Folks that handle sensitive info (proprietary code, personal info, HIPPA FERPA, SOX, .mil, etc, etc) should be allowed to download software only from company servers where all software has been cleared by folks that're experts in evaluating software packages. Not from the general internet. scott