Friday, June 20, 2008

Hacker Attacks Against Home Computers

Attacks against computers are fairly well endemic on the Internet these days. It’s important, for that reason, that you be protected by both anti-virus software and some sort of personal firewall.

I use BlackIce Defender (protects incoming only) but others are available; some free.

Let’s look at my system as just one example. I’m on the Internet via a dial-up link so the IP address changes each time I’m logged on. I’m connected various times that total maybe two hours on an average day (give or take a few minutes and assuming no major downloads or uploads).

Looking at my BlackIce logs for the period between 1 September 2000 and 30 November 2000 (three months) if find:

36 identifiable attacks divided up as follows—
19 NetBIOS probes (a well-known attack vehicle)
5 SubSeven probes (looks for SubSeven Trojan)
5 UDP probes (looking for a particular open port)
3 TCP fingerprint probes (looking for ways in)
1 IRC probe (looking for this service)
1 NetBus probe (looks for NetBus Trojan)
1 RPC probe (looking for this known service)
1 SNMP probe (looking for this service)

Remember, this is for a dial-up account that changes IP addresses and is only connected on average a couple of cumulative hours a day. If you have an “always on” broadband link of some kind (e.g., cable modem or DSL connection) you are considerably more at risk.

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