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The balkanization of Storm Worm botnets15 Oct 2007 20:04 New hope in blocking prolific pestgood articleBy Alan Donaly
Posted Monday 15th October 2007 23:28 GMT
Very nicely written very concise a little disconserting of course but well written none the less. Not A WormBy GottaBeKidding
Posted Monday 15th October 2007 23:35 GMT
Once again. It's bloody well not a worm. It's a trojan. Ever since this outbreak of sillyness started it's always been a trojan. Switch them off?By Andy Bright
Posted Monday 15th October 2007 23:52 GMT
Can't we just switch off Asia and Eastern Europe. Let the bastards have their own internet, and leave us honest folks alone. We lose the botnets, worms and hacked WoW accounts, they lose spam and 419s - everyone's a winner. Switch the US off too?By Karl Rasmusson
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 01:31 GMT
Switch off Asia and Eastern Europe? An analysis done by an associate has shown that the country with the greatest proportion of bots hosting spammer sites is the U.S. Should we switch them off too mate? See here... http://spamtrackers.eu/wiki/index.php?title=Botnet_hosting#Botnet_Geography_Charts BTW not everyone in Asia is a dishonest bastard (as you implied)! Not a well written articleBy Shannon Jacobs
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 01:41 GMT
Actually sounds more like a good defensive strategy by the bad guys, and one of the main implications not touched upon by the article is that it makes it harder for other people to use those technologies for legitimate purposes. Were you thinking that encryption would add something good to a legitimate P2P service you are designing? Well, you better forget it now. However from the spammer's perspective, it puts their eggs into different baskets that are more strongly separated from each other, which may make it harder to get all of them. I thought the article was another overly light populist approach to a complicated problem. Maybe the author does know his stuff--or maybe not. I'd have liked to see some links to heavier secondary sources that the Bleeding Edge Threats page. Re:Switch the US off too?By Pascal Monett
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 05:15 GMT
Won't need to. In the name of Homeland Security, they'll be switching themselves off by the end of next year. @Andy BrightBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 09:35 GMT
Most inappropriate name evah! Actually, most attacks on my servers seem to come from Belgium. I am with Shannon: poor articleBy Dave
Posted Tuesday 16th October 2007 09:40 GMT
Storm is a very devious, complex and well-designed malevolent toolset. For a really good insight into all aspects of the design I would refer all readers who have got here and want to understand more to go to Bruce Schneier's blog, which has its home at: http://www.schneier.com/crypto-gram.html, look for "The Storm Worm" in the October 2007 archive page (it has 'fallen off the bottom' of the current page) Bruce's entry refers out to a number of other articles and has attracted somehwat in excess of 100 comments. The period for commenting on this story has finished |
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San Francisco City Council regained access to its own computer network today after Mayor Gavin Newsom convinced network administrator Terry Childs to give them the passwords.
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