As if I didn't have enough to worry about:
Security Experts Warn Intruders Are Growing Threat to Home PCs
By ROBERT LEMOS ZD Network News
It's 3 a.m. Do you know who's on your computer?
Security experts warn that network intruders -- once only a bogeyman for large corporations and government agencies -- are becoming an increasing threat to home users, especially those connected to the Internet via new broadband connections such as cable modems and DSL.
"Home users don't have the right security tools nor the understanding about why they need them," said Eugene Spafford, a computer-science professor and security expert at Purdue University. "They are much more likely to be prone to attack, or their machines used in distributed, coordinated attacks."
Last week, denial-of-service attacks disrupted access to a number of major Web sites. Yet that shouldn't have been the major story, said Mr. Spafford. "What should have been the news is that there was hundreds and thousands of computers taken over by the attackers, and that the owners not only didn't know that they got broken into and taken over, but were not monitoring their systems."
'Hopeless Victims'
With the advent of always-on, high-speed Internet connections, home computers with little or no security are quickly becoming the No. 1 target for online vandals to use as a staging ground to shoot for more lucrative marks.
Most broadband users "are hopeless victims," the German "white-hat" hacker known as Mixter said during an interview this week over Internet relay chat. "Especially, when they're running Windows and have no good technical knowledge."
Mixter created a denial-of-service program, known as the Tribe Flood Network, which many believe was the tool of choice for the Web attackers last week. The attackers first had to compromise computers and seed each one with the program weeks or months before the attack.
This week, a computer believed to have been used in last week's attacks on Yahoo! Inc. and other major Web sites was reportedly seized by federal agents in Hillsboro, Ore. The PC's owner allegedly had no knowledge that the computer was being used as a "zombie" to stage attacks.
For most users, installing a personal firewall can stop most such illicit use. Just ask Christian Crumlish of the importance of a good firewall.
Spooked by last week's attacks, the Waterside Productions literary agent downloaded Zone Labs Inc.'s free firewall software, ZoneAlarm 2.0, and installed the electronic gate onto his DSL-connected PC. Other personal firewall products include BlackICE Defender and Norton Internet Security 2000.
"My system had slowed at seemingly random times in the past," said Mr. Crumlish. "But I never really thought I would find anything."
He was wrong. Mr. Crumlish found three programs that, together, opened up his PC for use by cyber vandals. The programs -- run.exe, msr.exe.exe and kerne1.exe -- were the pieces to a back-door program known as SubSeven.
Whoever installed the programs has come back knocking at the trap door he left behind, Mr. Crumlish said. "I have detected three or four attempts to get into my system since I installed ZoneAlarm," he said, adding that without the urging of a friend, he would never had thought to put the firewall on his system.
"Broadband providers are not telling their customers about the threats that they have to worry about," he said. In fact, more than 400,000 users have taken matters into their own hands and downloaded copies of ZoneAlarm since the attacks last week. Such incidences are quickly convincing broadband companies to change their tune.
Firewall Flare-Ups
One subscriber to broadband Internet-service provider Flashcom Communications Inc. complained to ZDNet News that the company wouldn't let him install a firewall. "They said they would not support a firewall, and if I installed one, they would disconnect me from the system," said Jann Linder, a Silicon Valley Web programmer.
Flashcom denied that it would prohibit any subscriber from setting up a firewall. "Setting up a firewall is not a trivial thing to do," said Richard Rasmus, president and chief operating officer for the Huntington Beach, Calif., company. "We don't do anything to defeat or frustrate a firewall that a customer sets up for themselves. But there is a distinction between that and supporting a product."
The company is now in the process of evaluating firewall products to select one that it will support in the future.
Excite At Home Corp. has also seen the light. The broadband-over-cable provider signed a deal with McAfee.com Corp. to sponsor a security zone for subscribers by March and offer its personal firewall product to Excite At Home's cable-modem customers.
Attention to such security details can't come quickly enough, said Gregor Freund, president of firewall maker Zone Labs. According to the company, attackers can directly access the hard drives of approximately 10% of home computers without having to circumvent security.
Those users' computers, Mr. Freund said, "are completely wide open." Such attacks are routine, he added, pointing out that during a 10-minute interview, six attacks were launched against his own company's system.
"We are a target, of course, but the bottom line is that people have to take responsibility for their own machines," he said. |