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FW: Worms versus Bots

  • From: Eric Krichbaum
  • Date: Mon May 03 23:16:12 2004

I see times more typically in the 5 - 10 second range to infection.  As
a test, I unprotected a machine this morning on a single T1 to get a
sample.  8 seconds.  If you can get in 20 minutes of downloads you're
luckier than most.

Eric


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
william(at)elan.net
Sent: Monday, May 03, 2004 11:49 PM
To: Sean Donelan
Cc: Rob Thomas; NANOG
Subject: Re: Worms versus Bots


On Mon, 3 May 2004, Sean Donelan wrote:

> On Mon, 3 May 2004, Rob Thomas wrote:
> > ] Just because a machine has a bot/worm/virus that didn't come with 
> > a ] rootkit, doesn't mean that someone else hasn't had their way
with it.
> >
> > Agreed.
> 
> Won't help.  What's the first thing people do after re-installing the 
> operating system (still have all the original CDs and keys and product

> activation codes and and and)? Connect to the Internet to download the

> patches. Time to download patches 60+ minutes.
> Time to  infection 5 minutes. 

Its possible its a problem on dialup, but in our ISP office I setup new
win2000 servers and first thing I do is download all the patches. I've
yet to see the server get infected in the 20-30 minutes it takes to
finish it
(Note: I also disable IIS just in case until everything is patched..). 

Similarly when settting up computers for several of my relatives (all
have dsl) I've yet to see any infection before all updates are
installed.

Additional to that many users have dsl router or similar device and many
such beasts will provide NATed ip block and act like a firewall not
allowing outside servers to actually connect to your home computer.
On this point it would be really interested to see what percentage of
users actually have these routers and if decreasing speed of infections
by new virus (is there real numbers to show it decreased?) have anything
to do with this rather then people being more carefull and using
antivirus.

Another option if you're really afraid of infection is to setup proxy
that only allows access to microsoft ip block that contains windows
update servers

And of course, there is an even BETTER OPTION then all the above - STOP
USING WINDOWS and switch to Linux or Free(Mac)BSD ! :)

> Patches are Microsoft's
> intellectual property and can not be distributed by anyone without 
> Microsoft's permission.
I don't think this is quite true. Microsoft makes available all patches
as indidual .exe files. There are quite many of these updates and its
really a pain to actually get all of them and install updates manually.
But I've never seen written anywhere that I can not download these .exe
files and distribute it inside your company or to your friends as needed
to fix the problems these patches are designed for. 
 
> The problem with Bots is they aren't always active.  That makes them 
> difficult to find until they do something.
As opposed to what, viruses?
Not at all! Many viruses have period wjhen they are active and
afterwards they go into "sleep" mode and will not active until some
other date!

Additionally bot that does not immediatly become active is good thing
because of you do weekly or monthly audits (any many do it like that)
you may well find it this way and deal with it at your own time, rather
then all over a sudden being awaken 3am and having to clean up infected
system.

--
William Leibzon
Elan Networks
[email protected]