Network World - ORLANDO -- A team of IT staffers at the University of Indianapolis last week showed off a bundle of open-source tools and scripts it uses to trap and isolate PCs infected by viruses or spyware.
Dubbed Shelob, after the sinister giant spider in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, the software identifies suspect traffic patterns, identifies the computers involved and then shunts them to a closed virtual LAN. Users get an appropriate Web screen, explaining what's happened and how to fix their PC or whom to call for help.
Shelob's inner workings were demonstrated here at Educause, the annual user conference for IT professionals in higher education. You can find one instance of Shelob in action in this January alert to students.
The school says that since being rapidly thrown together during the Blaster worm outbreak of 2003, Shelob has helped to keep it free of network or service outages related to virus infections. One limitation: it works only with clients that are plugged directly into the LAN, not wireless devices.
Shelob's creators are Shawn Austin, Matt Wilson, and Steve Corbin, all with the university.
To detect traffic anomalies, Austin says, the team wrote plug-ins for three open-source programs; Snort, an intrusion-detection program; Amavisd, an interface between message transfer agents and various content checking programs; and NMAP, a network scanner. A tool called Bleeding Snort keeps Snort's virus signatures updated daily. Using the output from these programs, Shelob populates a MySQL database table with a list of MAC addresses and other identifiers.
Shelob integrates with the school's own version of the open-source NetReg application, which is used to register an unknown DHCP client before it's granted full network access. When Shelob identifies an infected PC, NetReg assigns it a new IP address. Then, OpenVMPS (an open-source version of Cisco's VLAN Membership Policy Server) reassigns the port to which the PC is connected to a VLAN that only contains other infected computers.
Shelob then redirects the PC's DNS lookup requests to a Web server, which then delivers a page that tells the end user of the infection and gives instructions on how to clean it. The same Web page can be used to distribute McAfee's VirusScan, virus definition files and Windows updates or patches.
The PC is quarantined on the VLAN until the virus is killed or the spyware activity on the PC stops.
False positives occur, but they're fairly rare (about 1 in every 50 or 60 quarantined PCs), Austin says. Creating a Snort rule for a new virus


- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- Driving Secure Enterprise File Sharing and Syncing in the Enterprise
- GroupLogic's new activEcho is the industry's only secure Enterprise File Sharing and Synching solution that balances the need for simplicity for the end...
- The Enterprise File Sharing Option
- Enterprises and IT departments need to address several critical security issues when considering file sharing and syncing products. Many of today's solutions do...
- Security Strategies to Virtualizing Internet-Facing Applications
- The IT organization at Intel has set a goal to transition their enterprise to a private cloud for their Office and Enterprise applications....
- Cloud Security Planning Guide
- Cloud security considerations span protecting hardware and platform technologies in the data center to enabling regulatory compliance and defending cloud access through different...
- Cloud Security Vendor Round Table
- This vendor round table guide will help you to evaluate different cloud technology vendors and service providers based on a series of questions... All Security White Papers
- Live Webcast
Data Privacy and Protection in Production Environments: New Research from Ponemon Institute - Date: Wednesday, June 13, 2012, 1:00 PM EDT / 10:00 AM PDT
In a recent study conducted by Ponemon Institute, fifty-five percent of respondents... - Data Privacy and Protection in Production Environments: New Research from Ponemon Institute
- Date: Wednesday, June 13, 2012, 1:00 PM EDT / 10:00 AM PDT
In a recent study conducted by Ponemon Institute, fifty-five percent of respondents... - Security Certifications 101 - BlackBerry and all those acronyms what do they mean and why they matter?
- FIPS, Common Criteria, CAPS, AISEP, NFC, NIST, Fraunhofer SIT, CESG, DSD - these are just some of the government and industry certifications which...
- BlackBerry PlayBook OS 2.0 Security Overview
- The presentation provides an overview of BlackBerry PlayBook OS 2.0 security capabilities and features, including: BlackBerry® Balance™ technology, BlackBerry® Bridge, data-at-rest protection, and...
- BlackBerry NFC Security Overview
- The presentation on NFC security will provide an overview of the security protections built into the BlackBerry platform to protect users, application developers...
- Playing Defense: Staying on Top of Your Disaster Recovery Game
- When it comes to disaster recovery, rapidly growing data volumes, distributed computing models, and new technologies all combine to present an ever-changing playing... All Security Webcasts