nanog mailing list archives

Re: [fwd] Cracker Attack Paralyzes Panix


From: Stephen Balbach <stephen () clark net>
Date: Fri, 13 Sep 1996 12:53:53 -0400 (EDT)



"This is the first major attack of a kind that I believe to be the final
 Internet security problem," says a Lucent Technologies Internet 
 security expert, who says he "has been waiting" for just such an event.

This and similair "ping" floods are somewhat common. We have seen 2
incidents in the past 6 months. Both times hackers used our system to
initial ping floods against other ISP's, effectivly shutting down thier T1
connections. We did not see the floods since our 10Mb connection absorbed
the attack as normal traffic stats. Alex Rosen was quoted in the
Washington Post that this was not the publicity he wanted to have, but
believed such incidents needed to be exposed. 

/stb

---
Stephen Balbach  "Driving the Internet To Work"
VP, ClarkNet     due to the high volume of mail I receive please quote
info () clark net   the full original message in your reply.


On Thu, 12 Sep 1996, Paul Ferguson wrote:

FYI: Edupage excerpt of a WSJ article.

- paul

Date: Thu, 12 Sep 1996 17:18:14 -0400 (EDT)
From: Edupage Editors <educom () elanor oit unc edu>
To: "EDUCOM Edupage Mailing List" <edupage () elanor oit unc edu>
Subject: Edupage, 12 September 1996


CRACKER ATTACK PARALYZES PANIX
Repeated attacks by a computer cracker have virtually shut down New York's
Public Access Networks Corp., better known as Panix.  The attacks have
overwhelmed the computers' capacity to respond to requests for an
"electronic handshake" by sending as many as 150 bogus requests a second.
"This is the first major attack of a kind that I believe to be the final
Internet security problem," says a Lucent Technologies Internet security
expert, who says he "has been waiting" for just such an event.  Internet
computers have no quick way of distinguishing these bogus requests from real
ones, and even when security software is upgraded to ease the problem, the
crackers could respond with even more intense assaults.  "There's going to
be the usual arms race," predicts the Lucent security expert, between
improved security measures and crackers' ability to disable them.  (Wall
Street Journal 12 Sep B1)




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