Читать книгу Network Forensics - Messier Ric - Страница 3
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Introduction to Network Forensics
ОглавлениеIn this chapter, you will learn about:
What network forensics is
Evidence handling standards
Verification of evidence
Sitting in front of his laptop he stares at a collection of files and reflects on how easy it was to get them. He sent an e-mail to a sales manager at his target company – almost silly how obviously fake it was – and within minutes he knew that he had access to the sales manager's system. It took very little time for him to stage his next steps, which included installing a small rootkit to keep his actions from being noticed, and to ensure his continued presence on the system wouldn't be detected. It also provided him continued access without the sales manager needing open the e-mail message again. That had taken place weeks back and so far, there appeared to be no evidence that anyone had caught on to his presence not only on the system but, by extension, on the business network the sales manager's laptop was connected to.
It was this network that he was poring over now, looking at a collection of files related to the business's financial planning. There were also spreadsheets including lists of customer names, contact information, and sales projections to those customers. No really big score but definitely some interesting starting points. Fortunately, this user was well-connected with privileges in the enterprise network. This ended up giving him a lot of network shares to choose from, and for the last several weeks he has been busy looking for other systems on the network to take over. Getting access to the address book on this system was really helpful. It allowed him to send messages looking as though they came from this user, sending co-workers to a website that would compromise their systems with some client software, adding them to the growing botnet he had control over. File shares were also good places to not only get documents to make use of, but also to drop some more infected files. The key loggers that were installed have generated some interesting information and keeping an eye on all of that is an ongoing project.
Ultimately, this is becoming quite a little stronghold of systems. It's not exactly the best organization he's been in with respect to quality data from an intellectual property or large caches of credit card numbers or even health care information. However, having more systems to continue building the botnet is always good and at some point months or even years down the road, more interesting information may show up. In the meantime, there may be vendors who have trust relationships with this network that could be exploited.
Once inside the network, he has so many potential places to go and places to probe. There is a lot of data to be found and even though it appears that disk encryption is being used fairly consistently across the organization, all of that data is accessible to him as an authenticated user on the network. Wiping logs in places where they were turned on was trivial. This little network was all his for the taking for apparently as long as he felt it would be useful.
Does this sound scary at all to you? In reality, this is far too common and although it's dramatized, it's not that far off from how networks become compromised. Not long ago, technical intrusions were more common than the type of attack just described. In a technical intrusion, attackers use software vulnerabilities to get into a system remotely. This type of attack targets servers sitting in a data center because those are exposed to the outside world. That's not the case anymore. As we continue to learn, attackers are using people to get into systems and networks. This was vividly illustrated in 2013 in Mandiant's report, “APT1: Exposing One of China's Cyber Espionage Units” (https://www.fireeye.com/content/dam/fireeye-www/services/pdfs/mandiant-apt1-report.pdf). Attackers send e-mail with malicious attachments, get someone to visit a website, or just simply park malicious software on a known website and wait for people to visit in order to infect their systems. Unfortunately, this is the world we now live in, a world where companies who haven't had systems compromised are becoming the minority rather than the majority.
This is one reason forensics is becoming such a hot skill to have. Well, that and the fact that the folks on various TV shows make it seem really cool, interesting, and easy. The reality is a different story, of course. Although the news and other media outlets make it seem as though attacks are carried out by solo hackers (an ambiguous and misleading word), the majority of outside attacks businesses are subject to today are perpetrated by well-funded and organized criminal enterprises. There is money to be made from these crimes; criminals are starting to use ransom and extortion to go directly for the money rather than trying to steal something to sell off later on.
The term forensics can be ambiguous. Because of that, it's helpful to have an understanding of what forensics currently is and isn't. Particularly when it comes to network forensics, it's more and more becoming part of incident response. Digital forensics practitioners have to be capable of more than locating images and deleted files that may be common for the large volume of child pornography cases that traditional law enforcement practitioners may be looking for. Sometimes, knowing how to extract files from a computer system isn't enough because information can be obscured and deleted very effectively. Certainly operating system forensics is important, but sometimes it takes more than just understanding what happened on the system itself.
Network forensics is becoming an extremely important set of skills when it comes to situations like the one described at the beginning of the chapter. Rather than relying on what the operating system and disks may be able to tell you, a network forensic investigator can go to the network itself and collect data of an attack in progress or look up historical information that may be available after a company has suffered a security breach with someone taking up long-term residence, someone who has the ability to observe and piece together what they see into a coherent picture. This coherent picture may include information from other sources such as firewalls, application logs, antivirus logs, and a number of other sources.
One advantage to watching the network is that the network can't lie. Applications may not be doing what they are supposed to be doing. Logs may not be available or they may have been wiped. There may be root kits installed to obscure what is happening on a system. Once a network transmission is sent out on the wire, though, the bits are the bits.
Because of situations like the one described in the chapter-opening scenario, it's important to know exactly what forensics is as a practice as well as its role in incident response. Finally, there is a need for not only forensic practitioners in general because of the large number of incidents that occur in businesses around the world, but specifically, there is a need for network forensic practitioners.