±Recent Visitors

Recent Visitors to Com-Central!

±User Info-big


Welcome Anonymous

Nickname
Password

Membership:
Latest: HighestAce
New Today: 0
New Yesterday: 0
Overall: 6648

People Online:
Members: 0
Visitors: 492
Total: 492
Who Is Where:
 Visitors:
01: Home
02: Home
03: Downloads
04: Home
05: Home
06: Community Forums
07: Photo Gallery
08: Community Forums
09: Home
10: Photo Gallery
11: Community Forums
12: Downloads
13: Community Forums
14: Community Forums
15: Community Forums
16: Photo Gallery
17: Photo Gallery
18: Community Forums
19: Community Forums
20: Photo Gallery
21: Statistics
22: Photo Gallery
23: Photo Gallery
24: Community Forums
25: Downloads
26: Member Screenshots
27: Home
28: Home
29: News
30: Home
31: Community Forums
32: Member Screenshots
33: Member Screenshots
34: Home
35: Community Forums
36: Community Forums
37: Community Forums
38: Home
39: Community Forums
40: Home
41: Photo Gallery
42: Community Forums
43: Home
44: Community Forums
45: Community Forums
46: Home
47: Community Forums
48: Community Forums
49: Community Forums
50: Community Forums
51: Home
52: Photo Gallery
53: Home
54: Home
55: Home
56: Home
57: Downloads
58: Downloads
59: Home
60: Home
61: Community Forums
62: Home
63: Home
64: Home
65: Home
66: Home
67: Home
68: Home
69: Home
70: Home
71: Home
72: Community Forums
73: Home
74: Photo Gallery
75: Home
76: Home
77: Home
78: Home
79: Photo Gallery
80: Member Screenshots
81: Photo Gallery
82: Community Forums
83: Community Forums
84: Photo Gallery
85: Community Forums
86: Home
87: Photo Gallery
88: Community Forums
89: Community Forums
90: Photo Gallery
91: Downloads
92: Photo Gallery
93: Community Forums
94: Community Forums
95: Home
96: Community Forums
97: Downloads
98: Downloads
99: Home
100: Home
101: Community Forums
102: Downloads
103: Community Forums
104: Home
105: Home
106: Community Forums
107: Downloads
108: Home
109: Home
110: Photo Gallery
111: Home
112: Community Forums
113: News
114: Photo Gallery
115: Photo Gallery
116: News Archive
117: Community Forums
118: Community Forums
119: Community Forums
120: Statistics
121: News Archive
122: Community Forums
123: Community Forums
124: Community Forums
125: Community Forums
126: Photo Gallery
127: Community Forums
128: Home
129: Home
130: Photo Gallery
131: Community Forums
132: Community Forums
133: Community Forums
134: Photo Gallery
135: Photo Gallery
136: News Archive
137: Home
138: Community Forums
139: Member Screenshots
140: Downloads
141: Home
142: Community Forums
143: Photo Gallery
144: Home
145: Downloads
146: Community Forums
147: Community Forums
148: Home
149: Community Forums
150: Community Forums
151: Community Forums
152: Photo Gallery
153: Photo Gallery
154: Community Forums
155: Community Forums
156: Home
157: Member Screenshots
158: Community Forums
159: Home
160: Community Forums
161: Community Forums
162: Statistics
163: Home
164: Member Screenshots
165: Member Screenshots
166: Home
167: Photo Gallery
168: Home
169: Home
170: Home
171: Statistics
172: Photo Gallery
173: Community Forums
174: Home
175: Home
176: Downloads
177: Home
178: Community Forums
179: Community Forums
180: Home
181: Home
182: Home
183: Home
184: Community Forums
185: Photo Gallery
186: Home
187: Community Forums
188: Home
189: Community Forums
190: Home
191: Home
192: Community Forums
193: Home
194: Home
195: Photo Gallery
196: Community Forums
197: Photo Gallery
198: Home
199: Home
200: Community Forums
201: Member Screenshots
202: Photo Gallery
203: Downloads
204: Community Forums
205: Photo Gallery
206: Home
207: Community Forums
208: Home
209: Community Forums
210: Community Forums
211: Community Forums
212: Community Forums
213: Home
214: Home
215: News
216: Community Forums
217: Community Forums
218: Community Forums
219: Community Forums
220: Community Forums
221: Community Forums
222: Photo Gallery
223: Community Forums
224: Community Forums
225: Community Forums
226: Statistics
227: Statistics
228: Community Forums
229: Community Forums
230: Community Forums
231: Home
232: Community Forums
233: Photo Gallery
234: Your Account
235: Home
236: Community Forums
237: Member Screenshots
238: Home
239: Community Forums
240: Community Forums
241: Community Forums
242: Community Forums
243: Downloads
244: Home
245: Community Forums
246: Community Forums
247: Home
248: Community Forums
249: Community Forums
250: Photo Gallery
251: Statistics
252: Community Forums
253: Photo Gallery
254: Photo Gallery
255: Community Forums
256: Member Screenshots
257: Photo Gallery
258: Community Forums
259: Community Forums
260: Your Account
261: Photo Gallery
262: Community Forums
263: Community Forums
264: Community Forums
265: News Archive
266: Community Forums
267: Community Forums
268: Community Forums
269: Community Forums
270: Home
271: Home
272: Community Forums
273: Community Forums
274: Home
275: Home
276: Community Forums
277: Community Forums
278: Home
279: Community Forums
280: Community Forums
281: Community Forums
282: Community Forums
283: Member Screenshots
284: Community Forums
285: Photo Gallery
286: Member Screenshots
287: Community Forums
288: Community Forums
289: Community Forums
290: Photo Gallery
291: Community Forums
292: Downloads
293: Community Forums
294: Downloads
295: Community Forums
296: Community Forums
297: Photo Gallery
298: Community Forums
299: Home
300: Home
301: Home
302: Home
303: Downloads
304: Community Forums
305: Home
306: Home
307: Home
308: Member Screenshots
309: Home
310: Downloads
311: Home
312: Community Forums
313: Community Forums
314: Photo Gallery
315: Photo Gallery
316: Community Forums
317: Member Screenshots
318: Community Forums
319: Community Forums
320: Downloads
321: Community Forums
322: Community Forums
323: Downloads
324: Home
325: Community Forums
326: Member Screenshots
327: Member Screenshots
328: Community Forums
329: Community Forums
330: Photo Gallery
331: Community Forums
332: Home
333: Home
334: Community Forums
335: Home
336: Home
337: Home
338: Home
339: Community Forums
340: Community Forums
341: Community Forums
342: Community Forums
343: Home
344: Community Forums
345: Community Forums
346: Home
347: Home
348: Home
349: Member Screenshots
350: Home
351: Home
352: Community Forums
353: Home
354: Home
355: Community Forums
356: Photo Gallery
357: Home
358: Community Forums
359: Community Forums
360: Community Forums
361: Home
362: Home
363: Home
364: Home
365: Home
366: Member Screenshots
367: Community Forums
368: Home
369: Statistics
370: Community Forums
371: Community Forums
372: Community Forums
373: Home
374: Photo Gallery
375: Home
376: Home
377: Member Screenshots
378: Home
379: Home
380: Community Forums
381: Home
382: Home
383: Photo Gallery
384: Home
385: Home
386: Home
387: Home
388: Home
389: Home
390: Home
391: Photo Gallery
392: Home
393: Home
394: Downloads
395: Community Forums
396: Home
397: Community Forums
398: Community Forums
399: Community Forums
400: Community Forums
401: Home
402: Member Screenshots
403: Photo Gallery
404: Community Forums
405: Community Forums
406: Community Forums
407: News Archive
408: Home
409: Photo Gallery
410: Home
411: Community Forums
412: Community Forums
413: Member Screenshots
414: Community Forums
415: Community Forums
416: Downloads
417: Community Forums
418: Community Forums
419: Community Forums
420: Member Screenshots
421: Photo Gallery
422: Community Forums
423: Downloads
424: Photo Gallery
425: Photo Gallery
426: Home
427: Photo Gallery
428: Member Screenshots
429: Community Forums
430: Community Forums
431: Home
432: Statistics
433: Downloads
434: Community Forums
435: Community Forums
436: Community Forums
437: Photo Gallery
438: Photo Gallery
439: Member Screenshots
440: Photo Gallery
441: Community Forums
442: Photo Gallery
443: Photo Gallery
444: Photo Gallery
445: Community Forums
446: Community Forums
447: Community Forums
448: News Archive
449: News Archive
450: Community Forums
451: Community Forums
452: Home
453: Downloads
454: Photo Gallery
455: Downloads
456: Home
457: Community Forums
458: Home
459: Photo Gallery
460: Home
461: Downloads
462: Photo Gallery
463: Home
464: Statistics
465: Community Forums
466: Downloads
467: Community Forums
468: Community Forums
469: Community Forums
470: Community Forums
471: Community Forums
472: Community Forums
473: Photo Gallery
474: Community Forums
475: Home
476: Community Forums
477: Home
478: Your Account
479: Photo Gallery
480: Home
481: Community Forums
482: Community Forums
483: Community Forums
484: Community Forums
485: Community Forums
486: Member Screenshots
487: Home
488: Member Screenshots
489: Home
490: Statistics
491: Community Forums
492: Community Forums

Staff Online:

No staff members are online!
An EYE opening story about hackers! :: Archived
This is a forum for Software related items such as OS', Virus notices, cool or free programs, etc. Gaming software should go in the gaming folder pertaining to the current info.
Post new topic    Revive this topic    Printer Friendly Page     Forum Index ›  Software

Topic Archived View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
Shadow_Bshwackr
Janitor

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 21, 2005
Posts: 7019
Location: Central Illinois, USA
PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 12:38 pm
Post subject: An EYE opening story about hackers!

A story written by Brian Krebs @ Washingtonpost.com...

If this story don't make you want to secure your Windows install or worse yet, make you so paranoid you want to move to an alternative OS, I'll be very surprised. I sure don't like many "the sky is falling" articles, but this is too good to not share...

Invasion of the Computer Snatchers
Hackers are hijacking thousands of PCs to spy on users, shake down online businesses, steal identities and send millions of pieces of spam. If you think your computer is safe, think again

By Brian Krebs
Sunday, February 19, 2006; Page W10

In the six hours between crashing into bed and rolling out of it, the 21-year-old hacker has broken into nearly 2,000 personal computers around the globe. He slept while software he wrote scoured the Internet for vulnerable computers and infected them with viruses that turned them into slaves.

Now, with the smoke of his day's first Marlboro curling across the living room of his parents' brick rambler, the hacker known online as "0x80" (pronounced X-eighty) plops his wiry frame into a tan, weathered couch, sets his new laptop on the coffee table and punches in a series of commands. At his behest, the commandeered PCs will begin downloading and installing software that will bombard their users with advertisements for pornographic Web sites. After the installation, 0x80 orders the machines to search the Internet for other potential victims.

A look at how hackers control thousands of PCs and use them to make money.


The young hacker, who has agreed to be interviewed only if he isn't identified by name or home town, takes a deep drag of his smoke and leans back against the couch to exhale. He smiles. This is his day job, and his work is finished in less than two minutes. In two weeks, he will receive a $300 check from one of the online marketing companies that pays him for his services.

"Most days, I just sit at home and chat online while I make money," 0x80 says. "I get one check like every 15 days in the mail for a few hundred bucks, and a buncha others I get from banks in Canada every 30 days." He says his work earns him an average of $6,800 per month, although he's made as much as $10,000. Not bad money for a high school dropout.

Hacked, remote-controlled home computers, known as robots or "bots," and large groups of robot networks like the one 0x80 runs -- called "botnets" -- are the souped-up cyber engines driving nearly all criminal commerce on the Internet. Botnets are used to relay millions of pieces of junk e-mail, or spam, touting everything from cheap Viagra to get-rich-quick business schemes. And the botmasters who control these computer networks are at the heart of ominous and increasingly common online shakedowns known as "denial of service attacks." In such an attack, Web gangsters demand tens of thousands of dollars in protection money from businesses. If the businesses refuse to pay, the criminals order the thousands of computers that make up their botnets to flood the Web sites with meaningless traffic, crippling the businesses and costing them thousands or hundreds of thousands of dollars in lost revenue.

0x80 says that he doesn't use his botnet to shake down businesses. Instead, he and a growing number of botmasters make money by seeding their botnets with spyware, also known as adware. Once installed on a PC, the adware serves up pop-up advertisements and mines data about the user's online browsing habits. The computer worm that powers the botnet also gathers far more sensitive data from the victim's machine, including passwords, e-mail addresses, Social Security numbers and credit card data. The spyware and adware problem is pervasive and growing: A recent survey by the National Cyber Security Alliance and America Online found that four of five computers connected to the Web have some type of spyware or adware installed on them, with or without the owner's knowledge.

"Most days, I just sit at home and chat online while I make money," says 0x80, who says he makes $6,800 a month on average.(Sarah L. Voisin - The Washington Post)
The distribution of online advertisements via spyware and adware has become a $2 billion industry, according to security software maker Webroot Software Inc. And as the industry has boomed, so have the botnets. Just a few months ago, FBI agents arrested a 20-year-old from Southern California for installing adware on a botnet of more than 400,000 hacked computers. Jeanson James Ancheta's victims included computers at the Naval Air Warfare Center and machines at the Defense Information Systems Agency, according to government documents. He pleaded guilty to the charges last month.

Like Ancheta, 0x80 installs adware and spyware surreptitiously, though the law requires the computer owner's consent. The young hacker doesn't have much sympathy for his victims. "All those people in my botnet, right, if I don't use them, they're just gonna eventually get caught up in someone else's net, so it might as well be mine," 0x80 says. "I mean, most of these people I infect are so stupid they really ain't got no business being on [the Internet] in the first place."

Tall and lanky, with hair that falls down to his eyebrows, 0x80 almost never looks you in the eye when he talks, his accent a slurry of heavy Southern drawl and Midwestern nasality. He lives with his folks in a small town in Middle America. The nearest businesses are a used-car lot, a gas station/convenience store and a strip club, where 0x80 says he recently dropped $800 for an hour alone in a VIP room with several dancers. He tells his parents that he works from home for a Web design firm. His bedroom resembles a miniature mission control center, with computers, television and computer monitors, and what must be several miles' worth of tangled wires plugged into an array of surge-protected power strips.

At the moment, 0x80 controls more than 13,000 computers in more than 20 countries. This morning he installs spyware on just a few hundred of the 2,000 PCs that he has commandeered in the last few hours. He will stagger the remaining installations throughout this day and into the next, using a program he wrote that automates the process. If he installs too many bundles of spyware at once, the online marketing companies, "get suspicious, they cut me off, and I don't get paid," he mumbles, squinting at the screen while the nub of his cigarette sprinkles ashes all over his laptop and the coffee table. "I've learned not to get greedy."

A small dog with matted fur enters the living room and winds through 0x80's feet. 0x80 gives the dog a gentle shove with his foot, without even looking up from his laptop. He furiously stabs at the keyboard with his two forefingers, punching out a short command that produces a mesmerizing blur of black-on-white text that scrolls up the computer screen at several pages per second. 0x80 makes it halfway through a cigarette before the text flying across the screen finally stops. The command he typed -- "pstore" -- is short for "password store." On the screen in front of him is a listing of every user name and password that the owner of each infected computer has stored in the Microsoft Internet Explorer Web browser on his or her computer.

A quick scroll through the first few dozen pages of the file reveals credentials his victims have used to log in to online accounts at PayPal, eBay, Bank of America and Citibank, to name just a few. Many of the Web sites for which user names and passwords are stored are harmless, such as sports or hobby sites. Others are potentially far more revealing, such as hard-core sex and fetish Web sites. 0x80 has also found credentials for thousands of e-mail accounts, including dozens at ".mil" and ".gov" (U.S. military and government) addresses.


Want to read the whole article? Click HERE!

Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website Photo Gallery
JG300-Stoopy
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 05, 2005
Posts: 5840
Location: Group W bench
PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 4:04 pm
Post subject: Re: An EYE opening story about hackers!

Heckuva good read, Senor Bush, and thanks...although, on a point of order, "0x80" is more often properly pronouced "hex-eighty" among the old-school actual programming community....but leave it to the third-generation kids and hackers to corrupt even that much...as tho the modern-day corruption of the english language via terms such as "gr8", "h8", "w8" "y do u" etc isn't bad enough....

Here's a dumb question along the same lines: Isn't there similar danger in going to HTML links and such, given by parties or persons you don't trust?

I ask because although I've always been extremely well-protected (with not ONE virus instance in over 20 years) I finally did get brought down hard by some damn spyware thingy that I got by visiting a website that hosts - of all innocent things - Guitar Tablature (sheet music for those that are too lazy to read real music). All it took was one visit to that website and some pop-ups that came up. I backed right out but it was way too late, I had registry entries made and a nasty little thing that came up on the next restart. REverting back to a restore point was the only fix. I happened across the same site yesterday (slow learner huh?) looking for something else and this time, MS Anti-spyware caught it and I also used Task Manager to kill the process(es) that had been loaded.

So, my question is, say someone you don't really know posts an HTML link, say here in a forum or wherever....could be anything, but let's say a personal web page or greeting card link etc......should that be considered "high-risk" dangerous stuff to stay away from? Because that's the path I take....am I too paranoid?

_________________
"Once your reputation is ruined, you can live quite freely."
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website Photo Gallery
Doug_Kibbey
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 23, 2006
Posts: 4678
Location: The Great Satan
PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 4:12 pm
Post subject: Re: An EYE opening story about hackers!

- JG300-Stoopy
.
"corruption of the english language via terms such as "gr8".........

could be anything, but let's say a personal web page or greeting card link etc......should that be considered "high-risk" dangerous stuff to stay away from?


I don't think you're paranoid...and I flatter myself that I get your point completely Wink
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website Photo Gallery
RCAF_MadDog
Janitor

Offline Offline
Joined: Nov 13, 2004
Posts: 849

PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 4:26 pm
Post subject: Re: An EYE opening story about hackers!

I dontt think your paranoid either
The way I look at it Stoopy any link your not sure of is potentially dangerous. I dont usually click a link that is posted anywhere unless my sheilds are up or I know the person that posted the link. With the way the internet is nowadays its a use at your own risk deal. All we can do is to try to make sure our sheilds are going to hold up lol
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
Shadow_Bshwackr
Janitor

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 21, 2005
Posts: 7019
Location: Central Illinois, USA
PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 4:57 pm
Post subject: Re: An EYE opening story about hackers!

Well, the purpose of the post was to make those that don't know the hazards exist and give them some insight on how dangerous this really is.

Keeping up with your OS security updates is crutial these days and running some kind of firewall, anti-virus, spy tools and spy look out tools is a normal way of life for savy users.

To answer your question Stoopy, yep, HTML links can pass 'bugs' into the system and I fix a lot of puters who's users visits less than desireable locations on the web. I find running Webroot Spy Sweeper does a nice job watching your machine for this.

The saying "An ounce of prevention is worth more than a pound of cure." is certainly true when using the net and being pro-active is a much better approach than being passive in this case.

So, let me tell you what I'm running...

Firewall, Adaware, SpyBot, Webroot Spy Sweeper, MS Anti-spyware, Avast and/or AVG anti-virus (I use both, but not at the same time.) These are just the front end blockers, then I also run as maintainence, PcRescue, System Mechanic and Registery Mechanic.

It's a shame you have to run this stuff, but if you don't, it's a matter of time before you get hit.

Something else to think about. I also run Linux/XP as a dual boot and at times will stay in that OS for quite a while and only come back to XP for gaming. This is especially true if there's been a warning on the net about specific worms, bots or virus' out like the recent black worm. Once the threat is gone, I'll boot into XP, do all the updates, rescan all sectors and all is well... Wink
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website Photo Gallery
Shades
Forum Tree-Rat

Offline Offline
Joined: Mar 07, 2005
Posts: 6475
Location: 3rd Branch up, 'Ye Olde Oak', Green Wood.
PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 5:22 pm
Post subject: Re: An EYE opening story about hackers!

I'm amazed by how many people I run into in RidgeRunners who still don't have a firewall.
I'd be one of 'em if folks like EW_Gorilla hadn't explained it all to me when I first came on-line.
Cheers monkeys!

_________________
Skwerl's place.

Com-Central's cutest, fluffiest, twitchiest, tail.
CPU > Intel i9-9900k (o/c 4.9GHz); COOLING > BeQuiet! Dark Rock Pro 4;
MOBO > ASUS PRIME Z390-A; RAM > 2x32GB Corsair LPX 2666MHz;
GPU > Gigabyte GEFORCE GTX650Ti PCI-e 3.0 2Gb GDDR5;
AUDIO > Creative X-Fi Xtreme Music (plus - Universal Audio UAD2 Quad Custom accelerator);
HDD > 3x1TB+ M.2. SSDs; LCD > DELL - S2419HGF (1920x1080);
PSU > 650W be quiet Straight Power 11 - 80+ Gold;
CASE > BeQuiet! SILENT BASE 601; OS > Windows 11 Home Advanced (64-bit).
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website ICQ Number
RCAF_Wingnut
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 29, 2005
Posts: 786
Location: Omaha, Ne.
PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 9:02 pm
Post subject: Re: An EYE opening story about hackers!

I once read a story by the owner of one of those companies attacked by bot controlled pc's regarding his personal research into the attack and defense against the bots. He discovered that the best, at that time, firewall available was the Zonealarm from Zone Labs. Of the programs he tested, it was the only one that blocked attempts from inside to access the net without permission of the owner. All the rest allowed a program on the inside to access outside the system. They all blocked outside attempts to get in, but a lot of the time the bots are attached to e-mail that people downloaded, and didn't know it was there. The bots that attacked his business were controlled by a 15 year old kid. The businessmans computer was protected inside his network by his built in firewall on his router, but the flood of pings from the bot controlled pc's blocked his entire bandwidth for several days.

_________________
"May your Enemys Run With Fear!!"
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
Shades
Forum Tree-Rat

Offline Offline
Joined: Mar 07, 2005
Posts: 6475
Location: 3rd Branch up, 'Ye Olde Oak', Green Wood.
PostPosted: Mon Feb 20, 2006 9:28 am
Post subject: Re: An EYE opening story about hackers!

That research was specific to that company's computer network and shouldn't be taken as a recommendation for other systems:-
Security will vary from pc to pc depending on the components and software involved. ZA may well have served that chap well. It doesn't necessarilly mean it would serve someone else equally as well.

I've used McAfee and ZA in the past, which were the best for the machines I had them installed on. Now I use Norton as the NIS bundle is the best for my current machine. I'd rather not as NIS is so thorough, it affects system performance but I'm not sacrificing system security.
As Norton is still the best for my machine, I'll upgrade to NIS2006 and then review what's available when the time comes to change again.

_________________
Skwerl's place.

Com-Central's cutest, fluffiest, twitchiest, tail.
CPU > Intel i9-9900k (o/c 4.9GHz); COOLING > BeQuiet! Dark Rock Pro 4;
MOBO > ASUS PRIME Z390-A; RAM > 2x32GB Corsair LPX 2666MHz;
GPU > Gigabyte GEFORCE GTX650Ti PCI-e 3.0 2Gb GDDR5;
AUDIO > Creative X-Fi Xtreme Music (plus - Universal Audio UAD2 Quad Custom accelerator);
HDD > 3x1TB+ M.2. SSDs; LCD > DELL - S2419HGF (1920x1080);
PSU > 650W be quiet Straight Power 11 - 80+ Gold;
CASE > BeQuiet! SILENT BASE 601; OS > Windows 11 Home Advanced (64-bit).
Back to top
View user's profile Visit poster's website ICQ Number
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic    Revive this topic    Printer Friendly Page    Forum Index ›  Software
Page 1 of 1
All times are GMT - 6 Hours

Archive Revive
Username:
This is an archived topic - your reply will not be appended here.
Instead, a new topic will be generated in the active forum.
The new topic will provide a reference link to this archived topic.