Tag Archives: security

Hungarian bug-hunters spot 130,000 vulnerable Avtech vid systems on Shodan

SOHOpeless CCTVs and video recorders It shouldn’t surprise anyone that closed circuit television (CCTV) rigs are becoming the world’s favourite botnet hosts: pretty much any time a security researcher looks at a camera, it turns out to be a buggy mess.…

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Hungarian bug-hunters spot 130,000 vulnerable Avtech vid systems on Shodan

Justice Charges Hackers From Lizard Squad, PoodleCorp

Two teenagers face charges from the U.S. Justice Department for allegedly being members of well-known hacking groups Lizard Squad and PoodleCorp. On Thursday (Oct. 6), Krebs on Security reported that the pair have been charged with credit card theft and operating services that enabled paying customers to launch cyberattacks with the intention of knocking websites offline. The two 19-year-olds, Zachary Buchta and Bradley Jan Willem van Rooy, are believed to have conspired to cause damage to protected computers. “The charges are the result of an international investigation into the computer hacking groups ‘Lizard Squad’ and ‘PoodleCorp,’ according to a criminal complaint and affidavit filed in U.S. District Court in Chicago,” a statement from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Illinois said. “Buchta and van Rooy allegedly conspired with others to launch destructive cyberattacks around the world and trafficked payment accounts that had been stolen from unsuspecting victims in Illinois and elsewhere,” it continued. Last year, the U.K.’s National Crime Agency (NCA) arrested six teenagers for allegedly attempting to access a tool used by the Lizard Squad hacker group. Just days after those arrests were made, the NCA itself was taken down by a targeted cyberattack. The NCA’s website was down for more than an hour and was the target of a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack. In DDoS attacks, hackers bombard a targeted website with an overflow of data, eventually causing the entire network to crash. Lizard Squad took to Twitter shortly after the attack to take credit for the site shutdown. The group also gained press last year for supposedly launching a new business venture that allows anyone to join its security-breaching ways for a low cost of $6 a month. The subscription service known as LizardStresser allows subscribers to obtain a distributed denial-of-service attack tool. “This booter is famous for taking down some of the world’s largest gaming networks, such as Xbox Live, Playstation Network, Jagex, BattleNet, League of Legends and many more!” the LizardStresser homepage boasted at the time. “With this stresser, you wield the power to launch some of the world’s largest denial-of-service attacks.” Source: http://www.pymnts.com/news/security-and-risk/2016/hackers-from-lizard-squad-poodlecorp-arrested/

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Justice Charges Hackers From Lizard Squad, PoodleCorp

Worry more about small app layer DDoS attacks than huge network blasts, says Canadian vendor

Massive distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks have been grabbing headlines recently, with cyber security reporter Brian Krebbs being forced to temporarily take his site down after his service provider couldn’t handle a 620 Gbps attack, followed a few days later by a 1 Tbps attack on French hosting provider OVH. The incidents have some worried that DDoS attacks can now scale so high that current mitigation technology renders targeted organizations defenceless. Not so, says a Toronto security firm. In a report issued Tuesday DDoS Strike concludes CISOs worry too much about high volume network layer attacks and not enough about application layer attacks, which can take down a site with as little as 4.3 Gpbs of traffic. “Most organizations are only part way to understanding DDoS attacks and therefore having the capacity to defend against them with full effectiveness,” the report concludes. The report is based on an analysis of data gathered by DDoS Strike, which offers a service for testing enterprise infrastructures on their layer 3-7 denial of service mitigation techniques. DDoS Strike is a division of Security Compass, which makes application development security tools. What the company found after looking at its data from test attacks on 21 systems of Canadian and U.S.-based customers (some companies had more than one system) was that 95 per cent of targets tested suffered service degradation close to knocking a site offline — suggesting their DDoS mitigation efforts were useless. Of attacks at the application layer 75 per cent would have been successful. But, Sahba Kazerooni, vice-president DDoS Strike, said in an interview, network scrubbing techniques are largely effective. with service generally being denied only for a few hours until mitigation can either be tuned or turned on. More importantly, he added, is that application layer attacks are harder to defend, needing multiple tiers of defence, more expertise among IT staff trying to block them and fine controls. The result is more downtime for a successful app layer attack. “Our customers have a skewed way of looking at DdoS as a threat,” he said, “because they were being warned by the industry to worry about major ( network) attacks “and they’re forgetting about high level attacks on the app layer.” “We have this tendency to over-focus on technology when it comes to DDoS. We’re very quick to deploy on-site mitigation devices or to buy a scrubbing service. The piece that’s missing is to focus on the process and the training of staff to handle DDoS attacks.” Some of the customers tested brought their systems back from the brink in an average of 25 minutes, he said. (DDoS Strikes thinks that’s too long.) But of the successful test attacks his company carried out, over 70 per cent had some kind of process or people gap that resulted in longer than necessary downtime, he said. “A lot of companies can benefit not only from buying services and product but also training their employees,” Kazerooni concludes focusing more on their own processes with the goal of ultimately reducing downtime.” The report concludes that • businesses should stop thinking of DDoS attacks as crude acts of brute force, and start thinking of them as sophisticated, incisive attacks as complex as any other major hacking threat; • DDoS mitigation is incomplete out of the box, and can only be effective with proper DDoS simulation testing at all levels; • and DDoS mitigation should be viewed as a multifaceted strategy, involving people, process, and technology, rather than solely a technical fix. Source: http://www.itworldcanada.com/article/worry-more-about-small-app-layer-ddos-attacks-than-huge-network-blasts-says-canadian-vendor/386956

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Worry more about small app layer DDoS attacks than huge network blasts, says Canadian vendor

53% of DDoS attacks result in additional compromise

DDoS attack volume has remained consistently high and these attacks cause real damage to organizations, according to Neustar. The global response also affirms the prevalent use of DDoS attacks to distract as “smokescreens” in concert with other malicious activities that result in additional compromise, such as viruses and ransomware. “Distributed denial-of-service attacks are no longer isolated events limited to large, highly visible, targets. Sophisticated attacks hit companies of all sizes, in all industries,” said Rob … More ?

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53% of DDoS attacks result in additional compromise

SANS issues call to arms to battle IoT botnets

Do try this at home – but carefully The SANS Institute is hoping sysadmins can help it to do what vendors won’t: improve Internet of Things security.…

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SANS issues call to arms to battle IoT botnets

No wonder we’re being hit by Internet of Things botnets. Ever tried patching a Thing?

Akamai CSO laments pisspoor security design practices Internet of Things devices are starting to pose a real threat to security for the sensible part of the web, Akamai’s chief security officer Andy Ellis has told The Register .…

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No wonder we’re being hit by Internet of Things botnets. Ever tried patching a Thing?

IoT-based DDoS attacks on the rise

Cybercriminal networks are increasingly taking advantage of lax Internet of Things device security to spread malware and create zombie networks, or botnets, unbeknownst to their device owners. When lax security becomes a huge problem Symantec’s Security Response team has discovered that cybercriminals are hijacking home networks and everyday consumer connected devices to help carry out DDoS attacks on more profitable targets, usually large companies. To succeed, they need cheap bandwidth and get it by stitching … More ?

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IoT-based DDoS attacks on the rise

Security man Krebs’ website DDoS was powered by hacked Internet of Things botnet

Internet of Amazingly Insecure Tat? That’s the one The huge distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack which wiped security journalist Brian Krebs’ website from the internet came from a million-device-strong Internet of Things botnet.…

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Security man Krebs’ website DDoS was powered by hacked Internet of Things botnet

Google rushes in where Akamai fears to tread, shields Krebs after world’s-worst DDoS

600 Gbps traffic flood overwhelmed CDN Google has provided free distributed denial of service attack (DDoS) mitigation services to security publication Krebs on Security , stepping in after Akamai withdrew support.…

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Google rushes in where Akamai fears to tread, shields Krebs after world’s-worst DDoS

IBM botched geo-block designed to save Australia’s census

Bureau of Stats says spooks signed off IBM’s plan, but Big Blue mucked something up Australia’s Bureau of Statistics has heavily criticised IBM for the security it applied to the nation’s failed online census, which was taken offline after a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack that battered a curiously flimsy defensive shield.…

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IBM botched geo-block designed to save Australia’s census