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some may say that a botnet is not a Trojan horse, which is almost true. In that case, I quote Robert Lemos and Jim Hu, "A bot is also known as a remote-access Trojan horse program, or RAT."



Botnet is a jargon term for a collection of software robots, or bots, which run autonomously. This can also refer to the network of computers using distributed computing software.

While the term "botnet" can be used to refer to any group of bots, such as IRC bots, the word is generally used to refer to a collection of compromised machines running programs (usually referred to as worms, Trojan horses, or backdoors) under a common command and control infrastructure. A botnet's originator can control the group remotely, usually through a means such as IRC, and usually for nefarious purposes. Individual programs manifest as IRC "bots. Often the command and control takes place via an IRC server or a specific channel on a public IRC network. A bot typically runs hidden, and complies with the RFC 1459 (IRC) standard. Generally, the perpetrator of the botnet has compromised a series of systems using various tools (exploits, buffer overflows, as well as others). Newer bots can automatically scan their environment and propagate themselves using vulnerabilities and weak passwords. The more vulnerabilities a bot can scan and propagate through, the more valuable it becomes to a botnet owner community.

Botnets have become a significant part of the Internet, albeit increasingly hidden. Due to most conventional IRC networks taking measures and blocking access to previously hosted botnets, owners must now find their own servers. Often, a botnet will include a variety of connections, ranging from dial-up, ADSL, cable, educational, corporate, military, or even Government. Sometimes, an owner will hide an IRC server installation on an educational or corporate site, where high-speed connections can support a large number of other bots. Exploitation of this method of using a bot to host other bots has proliferated only recently, as most script kiddies do not have the knowledge to take advantage of it.

Several botnets have been found and removed from the Internet. The Dutch police found a 1.5 million node botnet and the Norwegian ISP Telenor disbanded a 10,000 node botnet. Large coordinated international efforts to shutdown botnets have also been initiated.

Botnets serve various purposes, including denial-of-service attacks, creation or misuse of SMTP mail relays for spam, click fraud, and the theft of application serial numbers, login IDs, and financial information such as credit card numbers. The botnet owner community features a constant and continuous struggle over who has the most bots, the highest overall bandwidth, and the largest amount of "high-quality" infected machines (commonly university, corporate, and even government machines).

Botnet servers will often liaise with other botnet servers, such that a group may contain 20 or more individual cracked high-speed connected machines as servers, linked together for purposes of greater redundancy. Actual botnet communities usually consist of one or several owners who consider themselves as having legitimate access (note the irony) to a group of bots. Such owners rarely have highly developed command hierarchies between themselves; they rely on individual friend-to-friend relationships. Often conflicts will occur between the owners as to who owns the individual rights to which machines, and what sorts of actions they may or may not permit.

A denial-of-service attack (also, DoS attack) is an attack on a computer system or network that causes a loss of service to users, typically the loss of network connectivity and services by consuming the bandwidth of the victim network or overloading the computational resources of the victim system.

If a machine receives a Distributed Denial of Service attack from a botnet, few choices exist. Given the general geographic dispersal of botnets, it becomes difficult to identify a pattern of offending machines, and the sheer volume of IP addresses does not lend itself to the filtering of individual cases. Passive OS Fingerprinting can identify attacks originating from a botnet: network administrators can configure newer firewall equipment to take action on a botnet attack by using information obtained from Passive OS Fingerprinting. The best solution is to use hardware (ASIC or FPGA) based Rate Based intrusion prevention system. A solution that can act within seconds like a split second circuit breaker is your best bet as an automated solution.

Botnets typically use free DNS hosting services such as DynDns.org, No-IP.com, & Afraid.org to point a sub domain towards an IRC server that will harbor the bots. While these free DNS services do not themselves host attacks, they provide reference points, often hard-coded into the botnet executable. Removing such services can cripple an entire botnet. Recently, these companies have undertaken efforts to purge their domains of these sub domains. The botnet community refers to such efforts as null routing, because the DNS hosting services usually direct the offending sub domains to an inaccessible IP address.

The botnet server structure mentioned above has inherent vulnerabilities and problems. For example, if one was to find one server with one botnet channel, often all other servers, as well as other bots themselves, will be revealed. If a botnet server structure lacks redundancy, the disconnection of one server will cause the entire botnet to collapse (at least until the owner(s) decides on a new hosting space). However, recent IRC server software includes features to mask other connected servers and bots, so that a discovery of one channel will not lead to much harm.


News about Botnets :

»Yahoo! Mail getting hammered by hackers via Akami

'Zombie' PCs caused Web outage, Akamai says


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last modified: 2009-04-27 18:00:36