Botnets, cloud computing power may be fueling attacks against VoIP
- 10 March, 2011 08:46
- Comments
A spike in attacks against IP PBXs that started last fall shows no signs of abating, spawning speculation that those responsible have tapped into botnets and cloud computing resources to carry out their illegal activities.
Regulation: VoIP and compliance regulations make strange and difficult bedfellows
According to separate security reports from Cisco and Sipera's Viper Lab research arm, the exploits are carried out using techniques that lend themselves to the interpretation that the attackers are tapping into broad resources that make their work more effective.
The criminals are using brute force attacks to crack passwords, indicating they may be bringing cheap, easily available cloud computing power to bear, says Adam Boone, Sipera's vice president of marketing and product management. The scale of attacks at any given moment indicates that botnets might be in play, but there is no hard evidence that either they or cloud resources are involved, he says.
The most common exploit against compromised PBXs is toll fraud - using someone else's phone system to make long-distance calls. The second is forcing the PBX to call premium numbers controlled by the attackers that charge by the minute. Businesses whose PBXs have been attacked are billed. "In both types of fraud, enterprises are frequently unable to dispute the charges because they are unable to provide evidence that the charges are in error," the Sipera Viper Labs report says.
Cisco also noted the prevalence of vishing - telephone-based phishing - where callers pretend to be from banks, the government or other institutions and seek to get victims to relinquish valuable personal data such as Social Security and credit card numbers.
Cisco's report, which is about IT security in general, says, "VoIP abuse has been on the upswing and appears poised for further growth." A graph categorizing different classes of attack puts VoIP among those with potential but near to the group Cisco calls "rising stars" that includes Web exploits, money laundering and data theft Trojans.
The increase in VoIP attacks was first noted just before Halloween last year when the peak percentage of attacks against VoIP routinely rose to a high of about 30 per cent. In previous research, Sipera found that attacks directed against VoIP topped out at about 10 per cent, Boone says. Since last fall the percentage of total attacks that are directed at VoIP has continued to peak at about 30 per cent.
He offers three possible reasons for the attention VoIP is drawing. First, by and large VoIP systems are unprotected from outside attacks, he says. Second, VoIP is becoming more popular and reaching a critical mass that draws attackers. "It's common, and it gets the attention of hackers," he says. And third, there's money in it to be had easily.
Sipera has set up honeypots that are exposed to the Internet that appear to be unprotected VoIP systems. Once attackers have successfully broken in, the honeypots monitor what they try to do. They also locate the source of the attacks by country. The top three attack-launching locations are China, Russia and the U.S., followed by South Korea, Vietnam, Turkey and India, Viper Labs says.
Read more about lans and routers in Network World's LANs & Routers section.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
NBN build gaining momentum daily: Quigley
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Monday Grok: Will Siri crack the walls of GOOG?
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
Security Threat Report 2012
This threat report shares the latest research on hacktivism, online threats, mobile malware, cloud computing, and social network security looking ahead to the coming year. -
The State of Data Security
Recognize how your data can become vulnerable, including the latest issues stemming from unprotected data on mobile devices and social media sites. Understand the compliance issues involved, and identify data protection strategies you can use to keep your company’s information both safe and compliant. -
Case Study: NZ Bus Develops Applications 60% Faster, Improves Database Performance by up to 35%
Key Benefits: Developed applications 60% faster, Created development and test environments in minutes compared to days and weeks previously, Reduced server costs by 30% with server virtualisation, Saved NZ$40,000 in database administrator training costs, Provided high availability features that keep the database and core applications up and running in the event of a server failure, Introduced compression capabilities that improved database performance by 30% to 35%. Read on.
















Comments
Post new comment