Good worms back on the agenda.A researcher has reopened the subject of beneficial worms, arguing that the capabilities of self-spreading code could perform better penetration testing A test of a network's vulnerabilities by having an authorized individual actually attempt to break into the network. The tester may undertake several methods, workarounds and "hacks" to gain entry, often initially getting through to one seemingly harmless section, and from there, inside networks, turning vulnerable systems into distributed scanners. The worms, dubbed dub 1 tr.v. dubbed, dub·bing, dubs 1. To tap lightly on the shoulder by way of conferring knighthood. 2. To honor with a new title or description. 3. nematodes after the parasitic par·a·sit·ic or par·a·sit·i·cal adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a parasite. 2. Caused by a parasite. Parasitic Of, or relating to a parasite. worm used to kill pests in gardens, could give security administrators the ability to scan machines inside a corporate network but beyond a local subnet (SUBNETwork) A logical division of a local area network, which is created to improve performance and provide security. To enhance performance, subnets limit the number of nodes that compete for available bandwidth. , David Aitel, principal researcher of security firm Immunity, said at the Black Hat Federal conference. "Rather than buy a scanning system for every segment of your network, you can use nematodes to turn every host into a scanner," he said during an interview with SecurityFocus. "You'll be able to see into the shadow organisation of a network--you find worms on machines and you don't know Don't know (DK, DKed) "Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party. how they got there." The topic of whether self-propagating code can have a good use has cropped up occasionally among researchers (http://www.securityfocus.coin/archive/1/333876/30/0/ threaded) in the security community. In 1994, a paper written by antivirus Refers to detecting and blocking computer viruses. See antivirus program, behavior blocking, virus and virus hoaxes. researcher Vesselin Bontchev concluded that 'good' viruses are possible (http://www.people.frisk-software.com/~bontchev/), but the safeguards and limitations on the programs would mean that the resulting code would not resemble what most people considered a virus. Later attempts at creating 'good' worms have failed, however, mainly because the writers have not adopted many of the safeguards outlined in the Bontchev paper. The Welchia Worm (http://securityresponse.syinantec.com/ avcenter/venc/data/w32.welchia.worm.html)--a variant variant /var·i·ant/ (var´e-ant) 1. something that differs in some characteristic from the class to which it belongs. 2. exhibiting such variation. var·i·ant adj. of the MSBlast, or Blaster, worm--had apparently been created to fix the vulnerability (http://www.securityfocus.com/ news/6760) exploited by the MSBlast worm, but had serious programming errors that caused the program to scan so aggressively for new hosts, it effectively shut down many corporate networks. Immunity's research is the latest attempt to create a more rigorously conceived framework for creating worms that could spread across specific networks to find and report vulnerabilities. The research essentially offers two advances, a strategy for the controlled propagation The transmission (spreading) of signals from one place to another. of worms and a framework in which reliable worms could be created quickly, Aitel said. "History has repeatedly shown us that people who write worms by hand make mistakes," he said. "Worms are difficult to build and very difficult to test." The nematode nematode or roundworm Any of more than 15,000 named and many more unnamed species of worms in the class Nematoda (phylum Aschelminthes). Nematodes include plant and animal parasites and free-living forms found in soil, freshwater, saltwater, and even vinegar worms would have to get permission to spread by querying a central server for a specific digital token, which Aitel dubbed a nematoken, before spreading to a particular machine. Another version of the software would use a whitelist to spread among only the company's computers. Because the worms would be limited to spreading in a specific company's network, they would be completely legal, said Aitel. He noted that penetration testers today are given the right by a company to exploit systems on that company's networks. The distributed nature of the worms do make ascertaining permission more difficult, he acknowledged. Aitel's idea is a new twist on an old concept. An author using the name MidNyte wrote a response to Bontchev's paper in 1999 arguing that a 'good1 virus that kept information on the last 100 hosts to which it spread could help defend against bad viruses. However, Aitel also argues that, in today's complex networks, nematodes could significantly reduce the cost of scanning a large network, by bringing the advantages of peer-to-peer concepts to penetration testing and network scanning. Rather than buying a new sensor for each subnet in a company, the nematode could spread using existing pathways to enumerate To count or list one by one. For example, an enumerated data type defines a list of all possible values for a variable, and no other value can then be placed into it. See device enumeration and ENUM. any computers with a given set of vulnerabilities. Moreover, the technology could be used to move search agents across a network to find specific flies or to push intelligence to all desktops without a specific client. On the other hand, the dangers inherent in self-propagating code are hard to overcome, said Jose Nazario, senior security and software engineer for network defense firm Arbor arbor Garden shelter providing privacy and partial protection from the weather, most commonly a lightweight, latticed framework (trellis) of wood or metal with interlaced branches of vines or climbing shrubs trained over it. Networks. "I still have my doubts that the controls he described are effective enough," Nazario said. "He addressed how you shut the nematodes down and how you make sure they don't infect infect /in·fect/ (in-fekt´) 1. to invade and produce infection in. 2. to transmit a pathogen or disease to. in·fect v. 1. other networks, but he hasn't addressed machine instability and the danger when people carry laptops across network boundaries." Nazario, the author of Defense and Detection Strategies Against Internet Worms (networking, security) Internet Worm - The November 1988 worm perpetrated by Robert T. Morris. The worm was a program which took advantage of bugs in the Sun Unix sendmail program, Vax programs, and other security loopholes to distribute itself to over 6000 computers on the , believes the best way to find vulnerabilities on a large network is to use dedicated sensors, an approach used by Arbor Networks. "There are a number of ways of finding those vulnerabitities in the network without the inherent risks involved in self-propagating code," he said. www.security focus.com |
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