'Bob' outsources tech job to China; watches cat videos at work
Developer at critical infrastructure firm outsourced job to China for a fraction of his six-figure salary, Verizon researcher finds
Computerworld - Showing what can happen when companies don't periodically review network logs, a software developer working for a large U.S. critical infrastructure company hired a Chinese firm to do his job so he could spend time surfing Reddit and watching cat videos.
Details of the 2012 incident, investigated by Verizon's security services group, was recounted this week in a blog post by Verizon security researcher Andrew Valentine.
According to Valentine, Verizon was asked by the infrastructure company to investigate some strange activity in VPN logs for a network that was set up to let remote workers securely log into corporate networks.
Last May, the unidentified company's IT security department started monitoring logs generated at their VPN concentrator and discovered an open and active VPN connection originating from Shenyang, China.
"This discovery greatly unnerved security personnel," Valentine wrote. "They're a U.S. critical infrastructure company, and it was an unauthorized VPN connection from China. The implications were severe and could not be overstated."
The company had created a two-factor authentication process for VPN connections.
Remote workers who wanted to access the company's network had to use a rotating token RSA key fob in addition to a username and password to log in. "If this security mechanism had been negotiated by an attacker, again, the implications were alarming," Valentine noted.
Perhaps most puzzling of all was the fact that a software developer's login credentials were being used to login from China while he was at his desk. "VPN logs showed him logged in from China, yet the employee [was] right there, sitting at his desk, staring into his monitor," the post said.
Security officials at the company theorized that its systems had been compromised by attackers that somehow managed to route traffic from a trusted internal connection to China and back, Valentine said.
The security team was convinced that malware was being used to initiate VPN connections from the desktop system of the developer, called "Bob" in the blog post, via an external proxy and to route that VPN traffic to China and back again to the company's VPN concentrator.
Vaentine described that theory as "convoluted," and noted that "like most convoluted theories, [it was] an incorrect one."
Verizon security researchers immediately found that VPN connections from Shenyang had been occurring almost daily for some six month, and sometimes spanned an entire work day.
Investigators then turned their attention to the computer of the developer, who is described as well versed in multiple languages including C, C++, Ruby, php and Java.
The developer, said to be in his mid-40s, was a long-time employee, a family man, inoffensive and quiet. "Someone you wouldn't look at twice in an elevator," Valentine noted in his blog.
Security alert
- Popular home routers contain critical security vulnerabilities
- IT security managers too focused on compliance, experts say
- Microsoft patches IE with record-setting updates to prep browser for Pwn2Own
- Adobe releases emergency Flash fixes for two zero-day bugs
- 'Andyhave3cats' is a better password than 'Shehave3cats,' study finds
- 'Bob' outsources tech job to China; watches cat videos at work
- Oracle rushes patch to quash critical Java bugs
- Project Blitzkrieg e-banking heist is a credible threat, McAfee says
- Adobe drags Google into Microsoft's Patch Tuesday
- Microsoft quashes critical bugs in IE10, Windows 8, Word
- The 20 Best iPhone/iPad Games of 2013 So Far
- 9 Steps to Build Your Personal Brand (and Your Career)
- 7 Consumer Technologies Coming to an Enterprise Near You
- 11 Signs Your IT Project is Doomed
- A walking tour: 33 questions to ask about your company's security
- 15 social media scams
- The 7 elements of a successful security awareness program
- IT Certification Study Tips
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Study Tip guide and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, cheat sheets, product reviews and more.
- Large-scale BPO automation market trends and solutions Download this whitepaper to discover technology solutions that allow you to provide customers tailor-made service and added value at a competitive price.
- How Much Money is Your Services Organization Leaving on the Table? Adopting service automation technology provides executives the visibility to increase profitability. Visibility enables actions that optimize key Services margin levers where improvements equate...
- Harness IT -- An Introduction to Business Intelligence Solutions Learn the key selection criteria required to provide your organization with the capability to address structured data, unstructured data and mobile demands so...
- Business Intelligence Shows its Smarts Today's Business Intelligence (BI) tools provide a new way to think about data with self-service capabilities and user-friendly analytics that can be used...
- Becoming An Analytics Driven Organization Join us on Tuesday, June 18, 2013, 11:00 AM EDT and learn how your agency can create an analytics culture that will enable...
- 3 Reasons Why Sepaton is the World's Fastest Backup Solution Leading analyst, Storage Switzerland learns how Sepaton backs up and deduplicates massive data volumes while maintaining the industry's fastest performance - all in... All IT Leadership White Papers | Webcasts
By Robert L. Mitchell
IT organizations that fail to gain traction as leaders in business innovation may soon end up as nothing more than legacy ERP system baby sitters. CIOs need to move up the food chain quickly -- or move on. Insider (registration required) more
