Archive for August, 2008

Best Western Hotel group’s systems hacked

Posted by Tahir 24 August, 2008 (0) Comment

The Sunday Herald is reporting that an international gang of computer hackers has penetrated the booking system of the Best Western Hotel group and stolen the identities of an estimated 8 million hotel guests.

The report states:

A Sunday Herald investigation has discovered that late on Thursday night, a previously unknown Indian hacker successfully breached the IT defences of the Best Western Hotel group’s online booking system and sold details of how to access it through an underground network operated by the Russian mafia.

It is a move that has been dubbed the greatest cyber-heist in world history. The attack scooped up the personal details of every single customer that has booked into one of Best Western’s 1312 continental hotels since 2007.

Update (August 27 - 11PM +4GMT) - FOX News is reporting that Best Western has denied the extend of the hacking incident claiming the report by the Sunday Herald as “grossly unsubstantiated” and “largely erroneous.”

Best Western did, however, confirm that a hacker was able to penentrate its computer network in one of the hotels in Berlin and install a trojan on one of the computers designed to steal data.

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Redhat’s Fedora Project servers compromised

Posted by Tahir 23 August, 2008 (0) Comment

Fedora Project Leader, Paul W. Frields, in announcement released yesterday, said that some Fedora servers were “illegally accessed” last week.

Here’s more from the announcement:

One of the compromised Fedora servers was a system used for signing Fedora packages. However, based on our efforts, we have high confidence that the intruder was not able to capture the passphrase used to secure the Fedora package signing key. Based on our review to date, the passphrase was not used during the time of the intrusion on the system and the passphrase is not stored on any of the Fedora servers.

While there is no definitive evidence that the Fedora key has been compromised, because Fedora packages are distributed via multiple third-party mirrors and repositories, we have decided to convert to new Fedora signing keys. This may require affirmative steps from every Fedora system owner or administrator. We will widely and clearly communicate any such steps to help users when available.

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Security measure against hacking implantable medical device

Posted by Tahir 22 August, 2008 (0) Comment

Scientists have finally worked out a “cloaking” device or a shield for existing Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator (ICD) devices, following a report detailing weaknesses in the communications mechanism that can lead to leak of patient information and risk of loss of life. ICDs are similar to pacemakers and used by heart patients to slow down the heart.

Earlier this year in May, a team of researchers from were able to exploit a weakness in the wireless communications protocol used by ICDs operating in the 175kHz frequency range. The research team was able to intercept the wireless signals used to communicate with the ICD and reprogram the signals, and even retrieve patient information. The complete research can be found here (pdf).

Communications between an ICD and ICD Programmer (computer)

Figure: Communications between an ICD and ICD Programmer (computer)

The cloaking device, invented by Dr Tamara Denning, a computer scientist at the University of Washington in Seattle, is designed to resist any instructions that come from anyone other than the doctor. The device itself is wearable like a wrist watch and technical working details have not been released.

Is this really a practical solution? Not everyone thinks so:

However, Dr William Maisel of Harvard University, who led the pacemaker hacking experiment earlier this year, said the cloaker was unrealistic.

In an emergency, a cloaker could be hidden in clothing and be hard for doctors to find.

‘You’re asking hundreds of thousands or millions of people to wear something every day for a theoretical risk,’ he said.

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Google’s Keyczar simplifies cryptography for developers

Posted by Tahir 13 August, 2008 (0) Comment

Google’s recently announced open source cross-platform cryptographic toolkit, Keyczar, is an excellent time-saver for security application developers. 

Keyczar simplifies implementing of cryptographic functions in applications which typically involves selecting a cryptographic algorithm along with the key length and operation mode, handling of initialization vectors, rotation of keys and the signing of ciphertexts. Keyczar selects “safe defaults” for all these options resulting in fewer mistakes from the developer.

Examples from Google:

Java
Crypter crypter = new Crypter(”/path/to/your/keys”);
String ciphertext = crypter.encrypt(”Secret message”);

Python
crypter = Crypter.Read(”/path/to/your/keys”);
ciphertext = crypter.Encrypt(”Secret message”);

Other open source security projects from Google include RATproxy and Flayer

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Videos from Black Hat 2008 - LA

Posted by Tahir 13 August, 2008 (0) Comment

Here’s a round-up of some of the interesting interviews from this year’s Black Hat event:

1. This year’s most popular Black Hat speaker - Dan Daminsky

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Justice for largest hacking case ever

Posted by Tahir 6 August, 2008 (0) Comment

CNN is reporting that 11 people were charged yesterday for allegedly stealing more than 40 million credit and debit card numbers. The hacking incidents relating to the accused took place at various major retail outlets in the USA over the past three years.

The defendants come from U.S.; Estonia; Belarus; China, with one individual whose country of origin still remains unknown.

From the report:

Under the indictments, three Miami, Florida, men — Albert “Segvec” Gonzalez, Christopher Scott and Damon Patrick Toey — are accused of hacking into the wireless computer networks of retailers including TJX Companies, whose stores include Marshall’s and T.J. Maxx, BJ’s Wholesale Club, OfficeMax, Barnes and Noble and Sports Authority, among others.

The three men installed “sniffer” programs designed to capture credit card numbers, passwords and account information as they moved through the retailers’ card processing networks, said Michael Sullivan, the U.S. attorney in Boston.

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New tool simplifies DNS exploitation further

Posted by Tahir 1 August, 2008 (1) Comment

DNS Multiple Race Exploiter simiplifies exploitation of the latest DNS vulnerability and even attempts to poison patched servers. According to the author:

Patched DNS servers randomize the UDP source port number, however, that will not eliminate the flaw; it will only increase the time required to poison the cache. Poisoning unpatched systems would take a period seconds, however, poisoning patched systems would take a period of hours.

Unlike the previously released tools that work on poisioning uncached “NS” and “A” records, this tool can overwrite any A record by using a CNAME response. 

The tool uses a static TTL of 0×7BEDABED in all spoofed replies, which should be sufficient to create an IDS/IPS signature to protect against the script kiddies out there.

cname_rr = (struct cname_RR *) (payload + sizeof(struct dns_hdr) + hostname->size + sizeof(struct query_RR));
cname_rr->name = htons(0xC00C);
cname_rr->type = htons(0×0005);
cname_rr->clss = htons(0×0001);
cname_rr->ttl = htonl(0×7BEDABED);
cname_rr->length = htons(entryname->size);

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