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From: Stuart Thomas (stuart_thomas
hotmail.com)Date: Mon Feb 11 2002 - 14:52:44 CST
I agree with Lee, the pre-amble to a buffer-overflow, say CRC32 attack for
ssh1, could
have a repeating pattern (maybe except for the return address repointing)
[different
memory size/operating systems]), which could give the possibility of an ids
rule capture.
Granted, any traffic post-compromise "might" be encrypted, between other
compromised hosts,
or more importantly "in-my-opinion" for administration by the attacker or
scripts managed by
the attacker. This could asssist in finding out more information about the
source of the attacker,
especially as you would have "their" source ip address. Don't forget, you
could have various other
give-away information in your IDS capture, such IP stack identification
(through tcp/icmp etc).
Another thought, the size of ssh the packets leaving the compromised host
would be measurable
too, as the worm/trojan/virus attempts to propergate itself, using the same
code, recognisable pattern.
(although random size packet padding might be an arse.)
Stu
----- Original Message -----
From: "Adam Manock" <abmanock
earthlink.net>
To: <incidents
securityfocus.com>
Sent: Monday, February 11, 2002 7:39 PM
Subject: Re: Steady increase in ssh scans
>
> >Here's my concern. With worms like nimda, lion, and others, sniffing is
a
> >major factor in analyzing the worm's propogation and exploitatoin
> >methods. An ssh based worm could take sniffing out of the picture (the
> >attack is over an encrypted service) and reduce forensic analysis to
> >artifact examination.
>
> Looks like we may need some honeypots...
>
> The encrypted activities of a hypothetical SSH worm could be logged using
a
> honeypot and a network sniffing logger, one that just so happens to have
> the honeypot's private SSH key. SSHmitm of the dsniff toolkit might
provide
> a good place to start with how to decrypt and log a sniffed SSH
connection.
> An alternative approach would be a deliberately man in the middle proxy a
> SSH honeypot and make the proxy also "look" vulnerable to the worm. The
> proxy would do then be able to cleartext log all of the worm generated
> traffic, encrypted or not.
>
> Adam
>
>
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