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Hackers, Crackers, and Network Intruders: Heroes, villains, or delinquents?

Hackers, Crackers, and Network Intruders: Heroes, villains, or delinquents?. Tim McLaren Thursday, September 28, 2000 McMaster University. Agenda. Hackers and their vocabulary Threats and risks Types of hackers Gaining access Intrusion detection and prevention Legal and ethical issues.

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Hackers, Crackers, and Network Intruders: Heroes, villains, or delinquents?

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  1. Hackers, Crackers, andNetwork Intruders:Heroes, villains, or delinquents? Tim McLaren Thursday, September 28, 2000 McMaster University

  2. Agenda • Hackers and their vocabulary • Threats and risks • Types of hackers • Gaining access • Intrusion detection and prevention • Legal and ethical issues

  3. Hackerz Lingo • Hacking - showing computer expertise • Cracking - breaching security on software or systems • Phreaking - cracking telecom networks • Spoofing - faking the originating IP address in a datagram • Denial of Service (DoS) - flooding a host with datagrams (e.g. by “smurfing”) • Port Scanning - searching for vulnerabilities

  4. Hacking through the ages • 1969 - Unix ‘hacked’ together • 1971 - Cap ‘n Crunch phone exploit discovered • 1988 - Morris Internet worm crashes 6,000 servers • 1994 - $10 million transferred from CitiBank accounts • 1995 - Kevin Mitnick sentenced to 5 years in jail • 2000 - Major websites succumb to DDoS

  5. Recent news • 15,700 credit and debit card numbers stolen from Western Union (Sep. 8, 2000) (hacked while web database was undergoing maintenance)

  6. The threats • Denial of Service (Yahoo, eBay, CNN) • Graffiti, Slander, Reputation • Loss of data • Divulging private information (AirMiles, corporate espionage) • Loss of financial assets (CitiBank)

  7. CIA.gov defacement example

  8. Web site defacement example

  9. Types of hackers • Professional hackers • Black Hats • White Hats • Script kiddies

  10. Top intrusion justifications 1. I’m doing you a favour pointing out vulnerabilities 2. I’m making a political statement 3. Because I can 4. Because I’m paid to do it

  11. Gaining access • Back doors • Trojans • Software vulnerability exploitation • Password guessing • Password/key stealing

  12. Back doors & Trojans • e.g. Whack-a-mole / NetBus • Cable modems / DSL very vulnerable • Protect with Virus Scanners, Port Scanners, Personal Firewalls

  13. Port scanner example

  14. Software vulnerability exploitation • Buffer overruns • HTML / CGI scripts • Other holes / bugs in software and services • Tools and scripts used to scan ports for vulnerabilities

  15. Password guessing • Default or null passwords • Password same as user name (use finger) • Password files, trusted servers • Brute force -- make sure login attempts audited!

  16. Password/key stealing • Dumpster diving • Social engineering • Inside jobs (about 50% of intrusions resulting in significant loss)

  17. Once inside, the hacker can... • Modify logs • Steal files • Modify files • Install back doors • Attack other systems

  18. Intrusion detection systems (IDS) • Vulnerability scanners • pro-actively identifies risks • Network-based IDS • examine packets for suspicious activity • can integrate with firewall • require 1 dedicated IDS server per segment

  19. Intrusion detection systems (IDS) • Host-based IDS • monitors logs, events, files, and packets sent to the host • installed on each host on network • Honeypot • decoy server • collects evidence and alerts admin

  20. Intrusion prevention • Patches and upgrades • Disabling unnecessary software • Firewalls and intrusion detection • ‘Honeypots’ • Reacting to port scanning

  21. Risk management Prevent (e.g. firewalls, IDS, patches) Contain & Control (e.g. port scan) Probability Ignore (e.g. delude yourself) Backup Plan (e.g. redundancies) Impact

  22. Legal and ethical questions • ‘Ethical’ hacking? • How to react to mischief or nuisances? • Is scanning for vulnerabilities legal? • Can private property laws be applied on the Internet?

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