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Science/Tech See other Science/Tech Articles Title: A credible plan to take down the Internet A credible plan to take down the Internet By Robert Vamosi Senior editor, CNET Reviews August 5, 2005 Forget the Fantastic Four. As I write, the forces of Good (the White Hats) and Evil (the Black Hats) are fighting for control of the Internet as we know it. At stake is the exploitation of flaws affecting the once-invincible Cisco router hardware, which currently carries most of the Internet's traffic on a daily basis. Once a working exploit for the Cisco IOS Shellcode is available on the Internet, it'll be only a matter of days before someone finds a way to craft it into a network worm. And then it's going to be a rough ride for everyone who uses the Internet. Unless, of course, the forces of Good prevail. Hyperbole? Perhaps, but a credible threat to the infrastructure of the Internet does exist. All indications suggest that the clock is ticking toward some kind of showdown between criminal hackers and the good guys. Unfortunately, the bad guys have a head start. At stake is the exploitation of flaws affecting the once-invincible Cisco router hardware, which currently carries most of the Internet's traffic on a daily basis. The threat Prior to this year's Black Hat security conference, security researchers and network administrators assumed that Cisco routers were invincible, a reputation that surely helped lead to the widespread adoption of Cisco routers across the Internet. The Cisco operating system is proprietary, and much of the specific internal hardware in the Cisco router is undocumented. Until recently, the idea of penetrating the Cisco Shellcode via remote access was fanciful. That was before security researcher Michael Lynn stepped up the lectern at this year's Black Hat conference, and after first stumbling through a deliberately faux presentation on VoIP security, proceeded to describe some (but not all) of his research to a skeptical audience. During his presentation, Lynn offered a quick demo of how he could access the root of a Cisco router remotely. Like the first runner breaking the four-minute-mile mark, Lynn emboldened other researchers to go out and see for themselves. Lynn said in his press conference one day later that his Black Hat presentation was perhaps only 5 percent of what someone would need to know to wreak havoc on the Internet, but he confirmed that his exploit, which he is legally barred from sharing, has the potential to harm hardware: "It's a software flaw that damages hardware." What he means is that by remotely attacking the Cisco IOS Shellcode, you could destroy the instruction set on the hardware that tells the router to turn on again. Talk about disrupting the regular flow of traffic on the Internet! Following Black Hat, Cisco issued an advisory detailing how flaws in the way older Cisco IOS system process IP6v packets could allow a remote user control of the router. But it's not really a secret, is it? But the point here isn't whether Lynn should have presented at Black Hat; it's whether Cisco was going to elaborate on information that many security researchers already suspected was in the hands of the bad guys. Lynn started his research in late January at the behest of his former employer, Internet Security Systems (ISS), and by February, he found a hole. In an interview with Wired News, Lynn said he did his due diligence; he reported his findings to Cisco and learned that Cisco had identified a similar flaw internally two weeks earlier. Together, ISS and Cisco worked to mitigate the flaw, and by April, Cisco rolled out a patch via software upgrade. Problem was, neither Cisco nor ISS really explained why the patch was necessary. Applying a patch on a network router often requires that the router be shut down for a given length of time; on a busy network, this requires scheduling, to say the least. Thus, many Cisco clients may not have applied the patch. That's bad. If Cisco found it, and if an independent security researcher found it, then criminal hackers could probably find it, as well. Mind you, the original flaw was found in February of 2005; Lynn's presentation and the subsequent hubbub occurred at the end of July 2005. That's about six months--plenty of time for someone, somewhere, also to have started work exploiting this flaw. Especially if they had a head start--which they did. Cisco really is under attack Last summer, someone stole the Cisco IOS source code, chunks of which are rumored to be on sale even today via the Internet. Lynn said he worked with reverse-engineered binary code--1s and 0s--which is much harder to piece together, but he did it. If the bad guys already have access to the source code, their task would be that much easier, especially now that Lynn's entire presentation--literally ripped from the conference proceedings manual by temps hired by Cisco before the start of Black Hat (link includes video)--can be found floating around the Internet, mostly on Russian sites. Researchers I spoke to at the Black Hat conference said they weren't expecting a network worm to surface anytime soon, but all admitted that the possibility exists. And it gets worse. Cisco has confirmed that its customer password system has been compromised. Details are unclear, but the compromise might detail the hardware that individual customers are running. This is exactly the kind of preliminary research that a criminal hacker would do before crafting an attack, either a one-time attack on a specific company or a government, or a widespread network worm. So now someone may own a copy of the Cisco IOS source code, may be working on an exploit of a known flaw, and may even have a list of Cisco customers and the hardware they own--sounds to me like a credible, nefarious plan to take down the Internet. What this means to you and me Many security researchers I spoke to at the Black Hat conference said they weren't expecting a network worm to surface anytime soon, but all admitted that the possibility exists. If anything, the flurry of news reports about the flaw has prompted large companies to patch their Cisco routers ASAP. That's good. The more routers that are patched now, the fewer will fall victim later. No wonder the U.S. government officials attending Black Hat all rushed to thank Lynn after his presentation, and one even handed him the challenge coin, a military medallion that honors those fighting
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I guess if the government was to want to shut down the internet - they'd do it with a black operation where their agents perhaps would steal code from CISCO and use this knowledge to build viruses which could do the job, then secretly introduce these viruses when they want and of course blame it all on 'hackers'.
Irainian Hackers.
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