Hackers, Crackers, and Network Intruders: CS-480b Dick Steflik
Hackers, Crackers, and Network Intruders: CS-480b Dick Steflik
Hackers, Crackers, and Network Intruders: CS-480b Dick Steflik
Network Intruders
CS-480b
Dick Steflik
Agenda
• Because I can
• Buffer overruns
• HTML / CGI scripts
• Poor design of web applications
– Javascript hacks
– PHP/ASP/ColdFusion URL hacks
• Other holes / bugs in software and services
• Tools and scripts used to scan ports for vulnerabilities
Password guessing
• Honeypot
– decoy server
– collects evidence and alerts admin
Intrusion prevention
Impact
Legal and ethical questions
• ‘Ethical’ hacking?
• How to react to mischief or nuisances?
• Is scanning for vulnerabilities legal?
– Some hackers are trying to use this as a business model
• Here are your vulnerabilities, let us help you
• Can private property laws be applied on the Internet?
Port scanner example
Computer Crimes
• Financial Fraud
• Credit Card Theft
• Identity Theft
• Computer specific crimes
– Denial-of-service
– Denial of access to information
– Viruses Melissa virus cost New Jersey man 20 months in jail
• Melissa caused in excess of $80 Million
• Intellectual Property Offenses
– Information theft
– Trafficking in pirated information
– Storing pirated information
– Compromising information
– Destroying information
• Content related Offenses
– Hate crimes
– Harrassment
– Cyber-stalking
• Child privacy
Federal Statutes
• Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1984
– Makes it a crime to knowingly access a federal computer
• Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986
– Updated the Federal Wiretap Act act to include electronically stored data
• U.S. Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act of 1996
– Ammended the Electronic Communications Act to require all
communications carriers to make wiretaps possible
• Economic and Protection of Proprietary Information Act of 1996
– Extends definition of privacy to include proprietary economic information ,
theft would constitute corporate or industrial espionage
• Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
– Standards for the electronic transmission of healthcare information
• National Information Infrastructure Protection Act of 1996
– Amends Computer Fraud and Abuse Act to provide more protection to
computerized information and systems used in foreign and interstate
commerce or communications
• The Graham-Lynch-Bliley Act of 1999
– Limits instances of when financial institution can disclose nonpublic
information of a customer to a third party
Legal Recourse
• Average armed robber will get $2500-$7500 and risk
being shot or killed; 50-60% will get caught , convicted
and spent an average of 5 years of hard time
• Average computer criminal will net $50K-$500K with a
risk of being fired or going to jail; only 10% are caught, of
those only 15% will be turned in to authorities; less than
50% of them will do jail time
• Prosecution
– Many institutions fail to prosecute for fear of advertising
• Many banks absorb the losses fearing that they would lose more if
their customers found out and took their business elsewhere
– Fix the vulnerability and continue on with business as usual