Hi Mark, In this situation I would Do The Right Thing(tm). Contact the admins on the list and inform your local FBI department. They might not care, but atleast you've informed them.
By being silent on this, you help no one but yourself. And that might not even be true since one of the 100 ips could trace back to you and notify the FBI before you do. It will take a few hours atleast to notify all of them, but with a generic message that you can cut and paste, the effort would be appreciated by the people you contact (atleast we hope they take it positively). Anyways, being silent on it is harmful, any way you slice it. Do The Right Thing. Best regards, Wayne Chang Pacific Northwest Software Mobile: (978) 869-3446 Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mark Sent: Saturday, August 02, 2003 12:39 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Hello list, In light of the current state of the internet with the DCOM vuln, I would like to ask for some advice on a situation I had at work. A little while ago(but before the DCOM vuln was released) I had a Win2k box hacked. The box was outside our firewall, running minimal services(ftp/www/smtp - gateway only) and was set to download/install everything it could via Auto-updates. Apparently I didn't reboot it often enough for all of the updates to take effect. Personally I really don't care how the hacker got in, as the box has now been replaced with a hardened Linux server, and when the attacker had control, they were still outside our firewall. The attacker created a user account with admin privs, installed a trojan, disabled all network access to any users except this new account, and proceeded to hack other vulnerable NT machines out on the net. I found a list of about 100 IPs with usernames and passwords that were either blank or the same as the username. My question is: Do I report this, and run the risk of the Feds charging me because these attacks originated from my subnet? Do I inform the owners of the machines that were hacked that their systems have been compromised? Judging from the usernames, some of these machines belonged to doctors offices, and may contain sensitive information. Or should I just have a nice cup of STFU, and pretend nothing happened? Before the flames start about how I'm such a lazy admin, I'd like you to know that I'm a developer full-time for a small company with a small budget and I manage the network with my "free" time. Yes it was stupid to stick a windows box out on the net without a firewall. I tell people all the time the same thing, maybe I'm just a sadist that likes watching M$ boxes get hacked, I don't know. But in that instance I really didn't care. I'd appreciate any comments anyone has.... Thanks, Mark _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html
