Category Archives: Security Websies

DDoS Attacks: Why Hosting Providers Need to Take Action

With no shortage of distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks overwhelming the news headlines, many businesses have been fast to question whether they are well protected by their current DDoS mitigation strategy and are turning to their cloud and hosting providers for answers. Unfortunately, the sheer size and scale of hosting or data center operator network infrastructures and their massive customer base presents an incredibly attractive attack surface due to the multiple entry points and significant aggregate bandwidth that acts as a conduit for a damaging and disruptive DDoS attack. As enterprises increasingly rely on hosted critical infrastructure or services, they are placing themselves at even greater risk from these devastating cyber threats – even as an indirect target. The indirect target: secondhand DDoS The multi-tenant nature of cloud-based data centers can be less than forgiving for unsuspecting tenants. A DDoS attack, volumetric in nature against one tenant, can lead to disastrous repercussions for others; a domino effect of latency issues, service degradation and potentially damaging and long-lasting service outages. The excessive amount of malicious traffic bombarding a single tenant during a volumetric DDoS attack can have adverse effects on other tenants, as well as the overall data center operation. In fact, it is becoming more common that attacks on a single tenant or service can completely choke up the shared infrastructure and bandwidth resources, resulting in the entire data center being taken offline or severely slowed – AKA, secondhand DDoS. A crude defense against DDoS attacks Black-holing or black-hole routing is a common, crude defense against DDoS attacks, which is intended to mitigate secondhand DDoS. With this approach, the cloud or hosting provider blocks all packets destined for a domain by advertising a null route for the IP address(es) under attack. There are a number of problems with utilizing this approach for defending against DDoS attacks: Most notably is the situation where multiple tenants share a public IP address range. In this case, all customers associated with the address range under attack will lose all service, regardless of whether they were a specific target of the attack. In effect, the data center operator has finished the attacker’s job by completely DoS’ing their own customers. Furthermore, injection of null routes is a manual process, which requires human analysts, workflow processes and approvals; increasing the time to respond to the attack, leaving all tenants of the shared data center suffering the consequences for extended periods of time, potentially hours. DDoS attacks becoming increasingly painful The growing dependence on the Internet makes the impact of successful DDoS attacks – financial and otherwise – increasingly painful for service providers, enterprises, and government agencies. And newer, more powerful DDoS tools promise to unleash even more destructive attacks in the months and years to come. Enterprises that rely on hosted infrastructure or services need to start asking the tough questions of their hosting or data center providers, as to how they will be properly protected when a DDoS attack strikes. As we’ve seen on numerous occasions, hosted customers are simply relying on their provider to ‘take care of the attacks’ when they occur, without fully understanding the ramifications of turning a blind eye to this type of malicious behavior. Here are three key steps for providers to consider to better protect their own infrastructure, and that of their customers: Eliminate the delays incurred between the time traditional monitoring devices detect a threat, generate an alert and an operator is able to respond; reducing initial attack impact from hours to seconds by deploying appliances that both monitor and mitigate DDoS threats automatically. Your mitigation solution should allow for real-time reporting alert and event integration with back-end OSS infrastructure for fast reaction times and the clear visibility needed to understand the threat condition and proactively improve DDoS defenses. Deploy your DDoS mitigation inline. If you have out-of-band devices in place to scrub traffic, deploy inline threat detection equipment quickly that can inspect, analyze and respond to DDoS threats in real-time. Invest in a DDoS mitigation solution that is architected to never drop good traffic. Providers should avoid the risk of allowing the security equipment to become a bottleneck in delivering hosted services and always allowing legitimate traffic to pass un-interrupted, a “do no harm” approach to successful DDoS defense. Enterprises rely on their providers to ensure availability and ultimately protection against DDoS attacks and cyber threats. With a comprehensive first line of defense against DDoS attacks deployed, you are protecting your customers from damaging volumetric threats directed at or originating from or within your networks. Source: http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2014/09/17/ddos-attacks-hosting-providers-need-take-action/

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DDoS Attacks: Why Hosting Providers Need to Take Action

SNMP-Based DDoS Attack Spoofs Google Public DNS Server

The SANS Internet Storm Center this afternoon reported SNMP scans spoofed from Google’s public recursive DNS server seeking to overwhelm vulnerable routers and other devices that support the protocol with DDoS traffic. “The traffic is spoofed, and claims to come from Google’s DNS server. The attack is however not an attack against Google. It is likely an attack against misconfigured gateways,” said Johannes Ullrich, dean of research of the SANS Technology Institute and head of the Internet Storm Center. Ullrich said the ISC is still investigating the scale of the possible attacks, but said the few packets that have been submitted target default passwords used by SNMP. “The attack uses the default ‘read/write’ community string of ‘private.’ SNMP uses this string as a password, and ‘private’ is a common default,” Ullrich said. “For read-only access, the common default is ‘public.’” Ullrich explained that the attack tries to change configuration variables in the affected device, the TTL or Time To Live variable to 1 which he said prevents any future traffic leaving the gateway, and it also sets the Forwarding variable to 2, which shuts it off. “If this works, it would amount to a [DDoS] against the network used by the vulnerable router,” Ullrich said. Large-scale DDoS attacks rely on amplification or reflection techniques to amp up the amount of traffic directed at a target. DNS reflection attacks are a time-tested means of taking down networks with hackers taking advantage of the millions of open DNS resolvers on the Internet to get up to 100 to 1 amplification rates for every byte sent out. Earlier this year, home routers were targeted in DNS-based amplification attacks; more than five million were used during February alone as the starting point for DDoS attacks. Also earlier this year, hackers found a soft spot in Network Time Protocol (NTP) servers that synch time for servers across the Internet. NTP-based DDoS attacks, some reaching 400 Gbps, were keeping critical services offline. However, a concerted patching effort has kept these attacks at bay and in June, NSFocus reported that of the 430,000 vulnerable NTP servers found in February, all but 17,000 had been patched. Experts, however, warned that SNMP-based DDoS attacks could be the next major area of concern. Matthew Prince, CEO of CloudFlare, said in February that SNMP attacks could dwarf DNS and NTP. “If you think NTP is bad, just wait for what’s next. SNMP has a theoretical 650x amplification factor,” Prince said. “We’ve already begun to see evidence attackers have begun to experiment with using it as a DDoS vector. Buckle up.” SANS’ Ullrich, meanwhile, said he’s continuing to research this attack, and admins should be on the lookout for packets from the source IP 8.8.8.8, which is Google’s DNS server, with a target UDP port of 161. “Just like other UDP based protocols (DNS and NTP), SNMP has some queries that lead to large responses and it can be used as an amplifier that way,” Ullrich said. Source: http://threatpost.com/snmp-based-ddos-attack-spoofs-google-public-dns-server

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SNMP-Based DDoS Attack Spoofs Google Public DNS Server

5 most targeted industries for DDoS attacks

1. Gaming Gaming is the most-targeted industry, according to the report, accounting for more than 45% of total attacks. The industry, which includes any company related to online gaming or gaming-related content, is prone to attacks by motivated players seeking to gain a competitive advantage or by malicious actors seeking to steal personal data from players. The industry received a large percentage of infrastructure layer attacks and a fair percentage of application-layer attacks in Q2, including 46% of all NYN floods and 68% of GET floods. 2. Software and technology The software and technology industry, which includes companies that provide solutions such as SaaS and cloud-based technologies, was hit with the second-greatest number of attacks (22%), and was the most-frequently targeted with infrastructure-layer attacks. The report reveals that the most popular attack vectors against the software and technology industry were DNS and NTP reflection and amplification attacks, accounting for 33% and 26% respectively. SYN floods made up approximately 22% of attacks, and UDP floods accounted for 27%. 3. Media and entertainment The report reveals that the media and entertainment industry accounted for a smaller percentage of all attacks, at 15% in Q2. This marks a 39% decrease from last quarter. Despite this shift, the media and entertainment industry remains one of the most targeted industries for hackers. These attacks often offer higher visibility for malicious actors, with press coverage that helps campaign organizers reach out to supporters and recruit new participants. The media and entertainment industry was hit by mostly infrastructure attacks, including SYN floods (18%), UDP floods (25%) and UDP fragments (22%). 4. Financial services Major financial institutions, such as banks and trading platforms, were targeted in 10% of all attacks in Q2, according to the Prolexic report. Historically, financial institutions have been the target of many DDoS attacks, including those orchestrated by the group Izz ad-Din al Qassam Cyber Fighters (QCF), using the Brobot botnet. The report discloses that recent activity indicates a possible resurgence of the use of the Brobot botnet, but the financial sector did not experience many major attack campaigns this quarter. 5. Internet and telecom Including companies that offer internet-related services such as ISPs and CNDs, the internet and telecom industry was the fifth most-targeted industry in Q2, accounting for 4% of all attacks. Infrastructure-layer attack vectors were the most common, with 10% of all attacks as UPD floods, and 9% as UPD fragments. Internet and telecom was the target of 12% of all NTP flood attacks this quarter. Source: http://www.propertycasualty360.com/2014/09/12/5-most-targeted-industries-for-ddos-attacks?t=tech-management&page=6

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5 most targeted industries for DDoS attacks

Webmin hole allows attackers to wipe servers clean

No RCE, but lots of Unix DDoS fun Holes in the Webmin Unix management tool – thankfully since patched – could allow attackers to delete data on servers, says security researcher John Gordon of the University of Texas.…

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Webmin hole allows attackers to wipe servers clean

Use home networking kit? DDoS bot is BACK… and it has EVOLVED

OMG, it reconfigures your firewall… SAVE yourselves, Linux lords A router-to-router bot first detected two years ago has evolved – and now has the capability to reconfigure the firewalls of its victims.…

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Use home networking kit? DDoS bot is BACK… and it has EVOLVED

WEBINAR – The Ultimate DDoS Info Session

DOSarrest and HOSTING partner together to help you understand the details of DDoS attacks – how they are executed, what they typically targets and how to quickly and efficiently recovered when you fall victor. It will be an interactive and informative session as all attendees will have a chance to participate in and defend against a DDoS attack in Real-Time and see its effects on a live website. Click here to register today!

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WEBINAR – The Ultimate DDoS Info Session

Nude celeb pics wrongly blamed for DDOS at New Zealand’s largest ISP

Actual culprit appears to be silly router configurations and Euro-nasties New Zealand’s largest ISP, Spark, has spent the weekend fighting off a DDOS incorrectly assumed to have a connection with last week’s nude celebrity picture scandal.…

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Nude celeb pics wrongly blamed for DDOS at New Zealand’s largest ISP

Week in review: Linux systems ensnared in DDoS botnet and Home Depot breach

Here's an overview of some of last week's most interesting news, podcasts, and articles: IT security is a matter of accountability The CEO has always had responsibility for the overall growth an…

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Week in review: Linux systems ensnared in DDoS botnet and Home Depot breach

Hackers launch DDoS attack on Obamacare website server, user data safe

In what could be another jolt for US President Barack Obama’s dream project ‘Obamacare health insurance program’, a government cybersecurity team last week discovered that an unknown hacker or a group of hackers tried to peep into a computer server supporting the HealthCare.gov website by apparently uploading malicious files. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the lead Obamacare agency, on Thursday briefed about the intrusions to top congressional staff. “The first incidence of breach occurred on July 8”, Aaron Albright, CMS spokesman, said. According to Albright, the main objective of the hackers was not to steal personal data but to launch a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack against other websites. In a DDoS attack, the malwares trying to communicate with the website makes the computers with internet-connectivity so overwhelmed that they fail to handle legitimate requests and lead to crash. “Our review indicates that the server did not contain consumer personal information; data was not transmitted outside the agency, and the website was not specifically targeted. We have taken measures to further strengthen security,” Albright said. Albright also shed out speculations that the attack would adversely impact on the second round of enrollment period, which begins on November 15, for the health coverage under the Obamacare. Meanwhile, the CMS’s parent agency – Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health and Human Services- and the HHS leadership have been notified of the attack and sources say investigation is under process. The Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said that the affected server has been forensically preserved by its Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT). The agency, which is also responsible in investigating cyber attacks, said that they had identified the malware designed to launch the DDoS attack and extracted them. Source: http://www.wallstreetotc.com/hackers-launch-ddos-attack-on-obamacare-website-server-user-data-safe/28570/

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Hackers launch DDoS attack on Obamacare website server, user data safe

Report on China’s underground services for DDoS Attacks

After analyzing trends in the Chinese underground, Trend Micro found that activity in the marketplace doubled between 2012 and 2013. Upon an even closer look, researchers at the firm also found that the most coveted tools and services in the underground were compromised hosts, remote access trojans (RATs) and distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack services. Trend Micro’s new research paper, “The Chinese Underground in 2013,”(PDF) detailed criminal activity facilitated in the space, and in a Thursday interview with SCMagazine.com, Christopher Budd, global threat communication manager at the company, said that, among the products, compromised hosts were most sought after. In the report, Trend Micro defined “compromised hosts” as client workstations or servers that cybercriminals “have gained command and control of” without the owners’ consent. “That makes sense, because the compromised host is a multi-tasker,” Budd said. “It’s kind of a like a Swiss army knife – you can do multiple things with it.” The report also highlighted the going rate last year for popular black market services. Distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) offerings, for instance, were offered for anywhere from $16 per day to nearly $500 for a “lifetime” DDoS toolkit rental, the report revealed. Researchers also monitored underground activity centered around mobile attacks. Trend Micro found that the most in demand offerings were SMS spamming services, SMS servers and premium service numbers. Overall, the report noted that the increased activity in the China’s underground took into account, both the number of participants and the number of product and services offerings in 2013. In his interview, Rudd also noted that attacks, facilitated through shady transactions in China’s underground market, were most often aimed at other users in the country – an ongoing trend that will likely continue. “The participants in the Chinese underground looking inward, and the Russian underground looking outward [in attacks], has been a consistent trend,” Budd said. “And partly, that’s linguistic, because the people in the Chinese underground market [products and services] in Chinese as opposed to English – [but] it’s a combination of cultural and linguistic factors,” he said. Source: http://www.scmagazine.com/report-chinas-underground-activity-doubled-last-year/article/369849/

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Report on China’s underground services for DDoS Attacks