Ads by TechWords

See your link here
Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
Security
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
 

Internet quiet as Sobig attack deadline passes

DDOS attacks still a possibility, security experts warn

August 22, 2003 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - The Internet was quiet as the clock ticked past the scheduled start time for a massive, coordinated action by Microsoft Windows machines infected with the Sobig.F virus.
Beginning today, antivirus companies warned of possible danger posed by an unknown program that Sobig machines were programmed to download and run beginning at 3 p.m. Eastern time.
Using atomic clocks associated with universities and governments around the world to coordinate their actions, the Sobig machines were scheduled to search a list of 20 Sobig.F servers that were individually hacked by the virus author and supplied with instructions to download and run a special file.
Security experts warned about the possibility of distributed denial-of-service attacks, as thousands of Sobig-infected machines were all pointed to a single Web site.
Virus authors could also instruct the infected machines to download a Trojan horse program, giving the author a back door into the infected system for future use, experts said.
The CERT Coordination Centers in the U.S. and Europe as well as the FBI were informed of the threat and worked to notify the Internet service providers that hosted the machines named by Sobig so that they could be taken off-line, according to Mikko Hypponen, director of antivirus research at F-Secure Corp. in Helsinki.
That effort appears to have been successful.
"It's pretty quiet," said Johannes Ullrich, chief technology officer at the SANS Institute Inc.'s Internet Storm Center shortly after the mass action was scheduled to begin.
Ullrich did not notice any change in Internet traffic around the time Sobig was scheduled to download its instructions.
There were conflicting reports today about whether all or just some of the Sobig servers were taken off-line.
Network Associates Inc. (NAI) said that none of the 20 servers was online, according to Jimmy Kuo, a research fellow at NAI.
Internet Security Systems Inc. reported that one of the 20 was still online at 3:00 p.m. Eastern time but no new instructions had been placed on the machine by the virus writer, according to Dan Ingevaldson, engineering manager at ISS.
The last Sobig server stopped responding shortly after 3:00 p.m., he said.
With few or none of the 20 servers accessible, Sobig machines were unable to download any instructions, experts agreed.
In addition, Internet backbone providers may have been asked to drop any traffic destined for those addresses, similar to steps taken to prevent a scheduled denial-of-service attack against the White House that was programmed into the Code Red worm, Kuo said.
Such a move is standard procedure when Internet abuse and crime is tied to a specific machine or machines, according to Ingevaldson.
In any case, once authorities began shutting down the IP addresses of machines used by the worm, it is doubtful that the author would have risked uploading new instructions to one of those machines, Kuo said.
"My guess is the author saw how big and fast Sobig propagated and didn't want to go any further," Ingevaldson said.
Regardless of the outcome of the Sobig attack Friday, future hackers may well learn from the successes of the worm and incorporate that knowledge into future viruses, he said.








Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

Additional Resources

Xerox
By using solid ink technology only from Xerox, you could save up to 65% by printing color for the cost of black and white. Enter for a chance to WIN a PhaserTM 8860 network color printer!
Microsoft
Save time and mitigate security risk. Deploy it now.
Sybase
In this white paper, IDC analyzes the role of next-generation mobile enterprise platforms as organizations seek a more strategic deployment of mobile solutions.

Learn the important issues you must consider before starting your next mobility initiative. Get your mobility white paper from IDC now, compliments of Sybase.

White Papers & Webcasts

Mitigating Litigation Risk with Email Management Tools
Does your company have an email retention policy that protects it when litigation occurs? IDC discusses effective email retention policies and the role...  

Managing And Protecting Your Ever Increasing Mobile Assets
Learn best practices for desktop and application virtualization, computer security, and computer life-cycle management....

Protecting Content During Business Disruption: Are You Covered?
Learn how ECM is helping Tulane University and the 13th Judicial Circuit Court implement disaster readiness programs....  

Why Compliance Pays
This OnDemand webcast explores the relationship that firms with best compliance records have higher revenue, greater customer retention, lower financial losses from data...

Beyond PCI Checklists: Securing Cardholder Data with Tripwire's Enhanced File Integrity Monitoring
How do organizations pass their PCI DSS audits yet still suffer security breaches? Paying attention to PCI DSS checklists only partially secures the...  

Best Practices for Managing Business Risks from the Use of IT
(Source: Symantec) Based on exhaustive benchmarks conducted by the IT Policy Compliance, this session highlights the relationship between business risks and use of...

Authentication as a Service by Forrester Research
Authentication-as-a-Service: understand the benefits of two factor authentication and the best ways to implement it....  

Sun OpenSSO Enterprise Webinar
(Source: Sun) This webinar replay discusses Sun OpenSSO Enterprise innovation--the single, open-source solution that helps your business solve the challenges around internal access...

Sustaining SOX Compliance: Best Practices to Mitigate Risk, Automate Compliance, and Reduce Costs
Since the adoption of SOX, much has been learned about IT compliance. Discover how to make SOX efforts more effective in "Sustaining Sox...  

Agile Enterprise Content Management (ECM) for Rapid ROI
(Source: IBM) Content rich business processes are a core feature of daily operations at just about any organization today. Very often these essential...