The Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack is becoming the crowbar of the online criminal. In the past we have got rather used to DDoS attacks being one of the favoured approaches of hacktivists, with perhaps the Low Orbit Ion Cannon (LOIC) and later the High Orbit Ion Cannon (HOIC) as used by Anonymous to take down sites being the best known examples. However, recent evidence suggests that taking down a site is increasingly no longer the be all and end all of a DDoS attack, instead it’s just a means to a much more profitable end. A couple of weeks ago I reported how a Bitcoin bank robbery took place under the smokescreen of a DDoS attack. I’ve now learned that a DDoS attack on another Bitcoin-related site, the Bitcointalk.org online forum, could also have been implemented as a smokescreen tactic. Information Week reports the site was actually targeted for a password-stealing exercise with some 176,584 users login credentials at risk. Indeed, as TK Keanini (CTO at Lancope) points out there is an established marketplace out there selling the DDoS capability to anyone with the cash, and relatively little of it is needed to attack a smaller company, so the bad guys don’t even need a DDoS strike capability as a core competency any more. “It is almost always the case these days that DDoS attacks leverage blended methods, where the volumetric technique is included, but not the primary objective” Keanini says, adding “this is a sign of what is to come in 2014 as more adversaries just put together a multi faceted compostable attack and instead of having to have all this expertise in-house, they will be able to outsource via these marketplaces that sell these capabilities.” Jag Bains, CTO at DDoS mitigation experts DOSarrest says that his company has been seeing DDoS attacks sending huge amounts of traffic to a website to overwhelm key points in its infrastructure to send the security team scrambling to fight it off as something of a trend. “This serves as a distraction for the security personnel and aims to weaken the underlying infrastructure” Bains explains “once the security operations are no longer cohesive, criminals can use other methods to target intrusion prevention systems to get in and steal information”. All of which just goes to reinforce that maintaining the focus of core operations during a DDoS attack is an ever increasing problem for IT operations. “As DDoS continues to be used as part of a 1-2 punch in cybercrime and data theft attempts” Bains concludes “IT professionals have become stressed in keeping up with the ever increasing size and sophistication of DDoS attacks”. All of which can influence an organisation to resort to what you might call non-standard, or panicked, practices to deal with the ongoing attack. Things such as disabling their IDS platform for example. Things that further compromise the overall security of the network and enable the attackers to pull off the primary attack with ease.
Category Archives: DDoS Criminals
13 Anonymous hackers plead guilty to PayPal DDoS attack
Thirteen defendants pleaded guilty in federal court in San Jose on Friday to charges related to their involvement in the cyber-attack of PayPal’s website as part of the group Anonymous. One of the def…
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13 Anonymous hackers plead guilty to PayPal DDoS attack
Week in review: Air gap-hopping malware, first PoS botnet, and the new issue of (IN)SECURE Magazine
Here's an overview of some of last week's most interesting news and articles: (IN)SECURE Magazine issue 40 released (IN)SECURE Magazine is a free digital security publication discussing some of …
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Week in review: Air gap-hopping malware, first PoS botnet, and the new issue of (IN)SECURE Magazine
Microsoft teams up with Feds, Interpol in ZeroAccess botnet zombie hunt
Just don’t bork our crim-busting honeypots again Microsoft has teamed up with the FBI to launch a renewed attempt to disrupt the operations of the infamous ZeroAccess botnet.…
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Microsoft teams up with Feds, Interpol in ZeroAccess botnet zombie hunt
Microsoft disrupts ZeroAccess botnet
Microsoft and law enforcement agencies disrupt ZeroAccess, one of the world’s largest botnets responsible for millions in fraud losses.
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Microsoft disrupts ZeroAccess botnet
Web fraud botnet ZeroAccess disrupted
ZeroAccess, one of the world’s largest botnets – a network of computers infected with malware, is disrupted by Microsoft and law enforcement agencies.
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Web fraud botnet ZeroAccess disrupted
Researchers uncover Point-of-Sale botnet
Researchers from Arbor Networks have spotted an active Point of Sale (PoS) compromise campaign using the Dexter malware or variants of it, aimed at stealing credit and debit card data. “The exa…
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Researchers uncover Point-of-Sale botnet
Bitcoin Password Grab Disguised As DDoS Attack
Attacks against bitcoin users continue, as online forum Bitcointalk.org warns users their passwords might have been stolen in distributed denial of service hack. Aficionados of the cryptographic currency known as Bitcoin might have gotten more than they bargained for recently, after a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack appeared to be used as a smokescreen for launching a password-stealing attack against users of Bitcointalk.org. Michael Marquardt (a.k.a. “Theymos”), one of the administrators of the popular bitcoin discussion forum, Sunday warned its 176,584 members of the attack. He said the attack had been traced to a flaw in the systems of domain registration firm AnonymousSpeech, which specializes in anonymous email, as well as running hosting servers outside the United States and the European Union. Attackers hacked AnonymousSpeech to change the bitcoin discussion forum’s DNS settings to an attacker-controlled server. According to Marquardt, the DNS redirection attack was spotted Sunday by forum manager Malmi Martti (a.k.a. Sirius), who immediately moved the domain to a different registrar. “However, such changes take about 24 hours to propagate,” he warned, meaning that users remained at risk unless they logged on to the forum using its IP address, rather than trusting domain name servers to resolve to the non-malicious site. What was the risk to forum users? “Because the HTTPS protocol is pretty terrible, this alone could have allowed the attacker to intercept and modify encrypted forum transmissions, allowing them to see passwords sent during login, authentication cookies, [personal messages], etc.,” Marquardt said. “Your password only could have been intercepted if you actually entered it while the forum was affected. I invalidated all security codes, so you’re not at risk of having your account stolen if you logged in using the ‘remember me’ feature without actually entering your password.” In other words, anyone who logged into the forum between Sunday and Monday, and who entered a password, should assume that it was compromised by attackers. What were the bitcoin forum attackers gunning for? The most likely explanation would be participants’ usernames and passwords, which — if reused on other sites — might have allowed attackers to drain people’s online bitcoin wallets. Likewise, attackers might have been interested in gathering email addresses of people who are interested in bitcoins to target them — via phishing attacks — with malware designed to find and steal bitcoins from their PCs. The DNS hack and DDoS attack against Bitcointalk are just the latest exploits in a long string of attacks targeting bitcoin e-wallet services and payment systems. Last month, Denmark-based bitcoin payment processor Bitcoin Internet Payment System suffered a DDoS attack that allowed the attackers to hide their real target: online wallets storing 1,295 bitcoins, which they successfully stole. At the time, their haul was valued at nearly $1 million. As that haul suggests, the rise in bitcoin-related attacks can be attributed to the bitcoin bubble, which has seen the value of the cryptographic currency rise from a low of $1 per bitcoin in 2011, to $1,200 per bitcoin as of Wednesday. The rise in bitcoin’s value has lead to a number of malicious attacks, as well as a rise in efforts of a different nature. Last week, for example, Malwarebytes researcher Adam Kujawa warned in a blog post that a number of free toolbars and search agents have begun including bitcoin-mining software, which can consume massive amounts of system resources, slowing PCs to a crawl. Bitcoin mining isn’t inherently suspect. In fact, it’s crucial to the success of bitcoins, because it’s what records the chain of bitcoin transactions. Furthermore, the bitcoin system is set up to reward — with bitcoins — anyone who successfully solves related cryptographic puzzles that help maintain the public bitcoin ledger known as the “block chain.” But some people have begun turning PCs into nodes in their personal bitcoin-mining empire, such as online gaming company E-Sports, which was recently hit with a related $325,000 fine by the New Jersey state attorney general’s office. In the case of toolbars and search agents with built-in mining software, however, users who agree to the accompanying end-user license agreement (EULA) might be authorizing a third party to turn their PC into a bitcoin-mining platform. “So take note if your system is running especially slow or if a process is taking up massive amounts of your processing power; it might be malware or even a [potentially unwanted program] running a miner on your system,” said Kujawa at Malwarebytes. “Looks like the bad guys are adapting all of their various technical attacks and business models to the bitcoin world,” CounterHack co-founder and SANS Institute hacking instructor Ed Skoudis said in a recent SANS email newsletter, responding to the Malwarebytes report. “Given the stakes for rapid money-making here, we’ll surely see even more creative bitcoin-related attacks in the near future.” Source: http://www.informationweek.com/security/attacks-and-breaches/bitcoin-password-grab-disguised-as-ddos-attack—-/d/d-id/1112919
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Bitcoin Password Grab Disguised As DDoS Attack
One-minute Koch-blocking attack earns attacker two years, massive fine
Low Orbit Ion Cannon claims another victim A Wisconsin man has been sentenced to two years of probation and a fine of $183,000 after pleading guilty to taking part in an Anonymous DDoS attack against the servers of Koch Industries for one minute.…
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One-minute Koch-blocking attack earns attacker two years, massive fine
One-minute Koch-blocking earns attacker two years, massive fine
Low Orbit Ion Cannon claims another victim A Wisconsin man has been sentenced to two years of probation and a fine of $183,000 after pleading guilty to taking part in an Anonymous DDoS attack against the servers of Koch Industries for one minute.…
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One-minute Koch-blocking earns attacker two years, massive fine
