Botnets
What the Heck Are Botnets?
"A botnet is comparable to compulsory military service for windows boxes" -
Stromberg
Botnets are networks of computers that hackers have
infected and grouped together under their control to propagate viruses, send illegal spam, and carry out attacks
that cause web sites to crash.
What makes botnets exceedingly bad is the difficulty in tracing them back to their
creators as well as the ever-increasing use of them in extortion schemes. How are they used in extortion
schemes? Imagine someone sending you messages to either pay up or see your web site crash. This scenario is
starting to replay itself over and over again.
Botnets
Botnets can consist of thousands of compromised machines. With such a large
network, botnets can use Distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) as a method to cause mayhem and chaos. For example a
small botnet with only 500 bots can bring corporate web sites to there knees by using the combined bandwidth of all
the computers to overwhelm corporate systems and thereby cause the web site to appear offline.
Jeremy Kirk, IDG News Service on January 19, 2006, quotes Kevin Hogan, senior
manager for Symantec Security Response, in his article "Botnets shrinking in size, harder to trace", Hogan
says "extortion schemes have emerged backed by the muscle of botnets, and hackers are also renting the use of
armadas of computers for illegal purposes through advertisements on the Web."
One well-known technique to combat botnets is a honey pot. Honey pots help
discover how attackers infiltrate systems. A Honeypot is essentially a set of resources that one intends to be
compromised in order to study how the hackers break the system. Unpatched Windows 2000 or XP machines make great
honeypots given the ease with which one can take over such systems.
A great site to read up on this topic more is The Honeynet Project
(http://project.honeynet.org) which describes its own site's objective as "To learn the tools, tactics and motives
involved in computer and network attacks, and share the lessons learned."
Keylogger
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