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[email protected] December 11th 07 01:25 PM

Detecting Intruders on Your System Is Fun and Easy
 
Detecting Intruders on Your System Is Fun and Easy

Well, perhaps the title of this chapter is a slightly misleading.
Supposedly, becoming an

intruder is fun and easy, too. If you want to detect intruders, you
should know what type of

system resources can be depended on for providing evidence. Should you
want to become an

intruder, you ought to know how commercial IDSs look for traces of
your activity.

Scanners are designed to take a look at your system and to let you
know whether you have

configuration problems or holes that can be used for attacks. If your
system was previously

set up in a secure fashion, and an intruder has altered this
configuration, a scanner will

detect this change (when you run the scan) and notify you of the
problem.

System-level intrusion detection tools differ from scanners in a
couple of ways. If the IDS

runs in real time, it can let you know the instant a compromise has
occurred. Also, if the

monitor gathers its data by reading an activity stream on the system,
it can detect a range

of features that a single scanner cannot. For example, scanners will
not tell you that

someone just entered three bad passwords and exceeded the failed login
threshold.

By the time you finish this chapter, you will understand the
following:

* How to classify attacks according to how they originate and the
threat they pose
* The pros and cons of different data sources that a system monitor
can use for decisions
* What system monitors can and cannot detect
* The tradeoffs you may need to make for monitoring your systems in
real time
* What it takes to really track someone through a network
As you will soon see, you need to consider a number of issues when
trying to build a

system-level IDS.

You can see the complate articles at http://www.network.79br.com

johns December 11th 07 04:46 PM

Detecting Intruders on Your System Is Fun and Easy
 
Too much jargon. This stuff is worthless unless it
can be understood by those who need it. I want
something that pops up and says, "Joe Blow just
tried to access your computer. He lives at 1125
Main Street, and he is a fat dateless pig. Attached
is a jpg of him and his Mommy at Pizza Porker."

johns

Mephisto December 11th 07 07:56 PM

Detecting Intruders on Your System Is Fun and Easy
 
johns wrote:
Too much jargon. This stuff is worthless unless it
can be understood by those who need it. I want
something that pops up and says, "Joe Blow just
tried to access your computer. He lives at 1125
Main Street, and he is a fat dateless pig. Attached
is a jpg of him and his Mommy at Pizza Porker."

johns


Closest you will get to that is setting up a Honey Pot.

johns December 11th 07 08:26 PM

Detecting Intruders on Your System Is Fun and Easy
 
Closest you will get to that is setting up a Honey Pot.

You mean put a picture of a hot Chicky-Poo on the
web, and have her auto-reply to the creeps? Good
idea. Start my own TV show.

johns


Mephisto December 12th 07 09:04 AM

Detecting Intruders on Your System Is Fun and Easy
 
johns wrote:

You mean put a picture of a hot Chicky-Poo on the
web, and have her auto-reply to the creeps? Good
idea. Start my own TV show.

johns


Sort of. It's a program you run that makes it look like your PC is open
to hackers but it is really capturing everything they do and their IP
address etc. Some companies use a type of honey pot that lets them break
into a virtual OS so the real OS is never touched.


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