Beware of Zombies - Attack of the Chinese Zombies

thrasherfox

BUSA
Donating Member
Registered
This is for any / all IT professionals.



Below link is for validation of article.


http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=38027


I am also pasting in the text for ease of read and also incase the link fails (A zombie attack?)



By Bob Brewin
GovExec.com
September 17, 2007

Attack of the Chinese Zombies

The wave of cyberprobes or cyberattacks against Pentagon networks and
government computer systems in France, Germany, New Zealand and the United
Kingdom this summer appears to emanate from China, but no one in authority
in the Defense Department or any of the other countries that have been
victimized seems willing to finger the Chinese government or military as the
culprit.

Paul Strassmann -- who served as director of Defense information in the
early 1990s, the acting chief information officer of NASA from 2002 to 2003,
and now serves as a Defense senior adviser -- declines to point fingers,
either. He prefers, instead, to focus on one startling fact about Chinese
activity in cyberspace: As of the morning of Sept. 14, there were exactly
(remember, Strassmann is an engineer and likes
precision) 735,598 computers in the United States infested by Chinese
zombies, he said. Zombies are those small programs that infect computers at
the root level and allow the computers to be controlled by remote users.

"This is a fact that should get everyone's attention," Strassmann said.
Those zombie computers can launch massive denial-of-service attacks, spewing
1,000 messages a second against target computers, he said.

While at NASA, Strassmann experienced a massive zombie-directed
denial-of-service attack which eventually shut down eight of the Internet's
root servers. The servers help direct traffic globally through a master
directory of domain names.

The zombies infecting U.S. computers today could be used to launch a massive
cyberattack, which Strassmann described as "the cheapest attack weapon a
nation can buy."

I have a hunch that the 735,598 U.S. computers infected by Chinese zombies
did not come about because China is filled with a lot of bored teenagers
with broadband connections who just like to goof around in cyberspace.

Want to monitor the inexorable march of the Chinese zombies on your own?
Strassmann suggests checking out the zombie stats on a Web site maintained
by CipherTrust.


Millions of GIG Scans a Day

Defense experiences millions of cyberscans of the Global Information Grid
every day, according to an internal talking paper it prepared in response to
news reports this month that China had successfully attacked Pentagon
computer systems, including those used by the Office of the Secretary of
Defense.

The paper dances around the subject of Chinese culpability and would only go
as far as to report, "We have seen attempts by a variety of
state- and nonstate-sponsored organizations to gain unauthorized access to,
or otherwise degrade, DoD information systems."

Well, that certainly narrows it down.


The Microsoft Petri Dish

Strassmann said one reason that zombies and other cybernasties succeed so
well is that they can easily hide in the hundreds of millions of lines of
code that make up Microsoft operating systems and applications.
Microsoft-based systems are a "Petri dish" for zombies, he said, adding that
global reliance on MS systems exacerbates the problem.

Since there are no real, inexpensive alternatives to MS today, Strassmann
said users really, really need to be conscious of even seemingly innocent
e-mails that can be used to launch a zombie attack.

It's hard to believe, but evidently there are some folks out there who have
not figured out that e-mails flogging Viagra are scams -- and potential
zombie launchers.


How About Some DeVenCI Code For Zombies?

In a bit of serendipity, the Critical Information Technology Sector group,
part of the Defense Venture Catalyst Initiative (DeVenCI), plans to hold a
network survivability and recovery workshop on Nov. 13. Maybe out of that
workshop will come a new zombie killer?

DeVenCI is looking for innovative companies who do not normally conduct
business with Defense to make short pitches on their network software,
gadgets and gizmos. Anyone interested in the workshop should e-mail an
application (hopefully from a noninfected machine) to devenci@osd.mil no
later than Friday, Sept. 28.
 
Take a layered approach to security. Monitor your systems and networks. Educate your users. Cross your fingers.
 
here's a thought: STOP USING WINDOWS!!!!! Windows is an XBOX to me: plays games. For everything else, free and secure Linux is now just as simple to use, has ALL the same tools and does everything else I need. Heck, you can boot linux from a CD and never even need a harddrive for hackers to install crap on. Ever try to install anything on a closed CDROM? good luck.
 
Back
Top