Yes, they say they are now doing this.
http://www.infoworld.com/article/04/03/09/HNcomcastspam_1.html
-Tom
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Frank Knobbe
Sent: Monday, March 08, 2004 8:29 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Full-Disclosure] Comcast using IPS to protect the Internet from their home 
user clients?


This post should probably have gone to SF-PenTests, but since it is more of a 
discussion item, I thought about Full Disclosure, the list for vuln info and 
everything else :)


Anyhow, I noticed that certain vulnerability scans, for example scans using Nikto and 
similar tools, when run from a Comcast address show a different behavior than when 
they are run from a clear, uncontrolled Internet connection (i.e. corporate T-3). In 
fact, it appears like Comcast has an Inline-IDS (some call it an IPS ;) sitting on its 
wires, filtering out certain signatures and blocking subsequent access for a short 
period of time. For example, scan progresses, then hangs inexplicably, then resumes, 
trips a sig, and hangs again. At the same time, the same scan from a non-Comcast 
address continues without any hick-ups. Targets have been ruled out (up and running, 
verified at the same time from different addresses), and connectivity to the rest of 
the net remains. It's looks like just the src-dst address pair is used so that all 
connections from a Comcast src to that particular dst are blocked for a short moment 
(1-5 minutes).

Has anyone else noticed that? Is Comcast actually attempting to keep all those 
worms'n'viruses of their clients away from the Internet?

How many other ISP's are known to use IPS's inline to protect themselves from the 
'Net, or protect the 'Net from themselves?

Regards,
Frank (routing all scans via VPN through corporate hosts ;)





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