And usually empty. I approve!
On Friday, 21 October 2011, Ty Purcell <[email protected]> wrote: > Pooh. > > > > Pooh’s Hunny Pot was quite portable.. > > > > From: [email protected] [mailto: [email protected]] On Behalf Of John Strand > Sent: Friday, October 21, 2011 11:06 AM > To: PaulDotCom Security Weekly Mailing List > Subject: Re: [Pauldotcom] portable honeyport tool waiting for a name > > > > Pooh > > Sent from my phone. > > On Oct 21, 2011 9:59 AM, "Tim Krabec" <[email protected]> wrote: > > In honor of Larry's Disney vacation I vote Pooh > > On Fri, Oct 21, 2011 at 11:16 AM, Jim Halfpenny <[email protected]> wrote: > > Portable Honey Pot or PHP for short... oh wait! > > On 21 October 2011 15:15, Ron Gula <[email protected]> wrote: >> HoneySpot ? >> >> Ron Gula >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: [email protected] [mailto: [email protected]] On Behalf Of Larry Pesce >> Sent: Friday, October 21, 2011 10:05 AM >> To: [email protected] >> Subject: Re: [Pauldotcom] portable honeyport tool waiting for a name >> >> A name? >> >> Portable. Honeypot. >> >> How about Portapotty? >> >> :-) >> >> - L >> >> On 10/16/11 12:18 PM, Chris Benedict wrote: >>> After listening to the pdc guys talk about "honeyports" on the pdc podcast I decided to run with the idea a bit further. I'm not sure if this has been done yet or not, but I've written a program in Ruby to implement honeyports with some extra features thrown into the mix. For info on honeyports check out john strand's tech segments on episodes 203 and 204 of the pdc podcast. >>> >>> You can use a raw tcp listener (netcat-style) to trigger blacklisting or you can write modules to emulate a ftp server or web server or whatever that can, for instance, give a banner and version info but blacklist on attempted logins. When a host trips one of the alarms it broadcasts a signed udp alert to all the other hosts on the lan so they can act on it also. Alerts can be handled by different modules too, so far I have only written a commandline module that simply executes a command with an ip address as an argument that you can use to insert an ip into a blacklist table in pf for instance. Something like a syslog or mysql module wouldn't be too difficult to write. >>> >>> As far as making it secure goes, it has some more work to be done. Broadcasted alerts are cryptographically signed and verified but I need to implement some stuff to prevent replay attacks and I need to add in whitelisting and thresholding to make it more difficult to use as a weapon against the user's own network. >>> >>> So, I've tried to make the code all very modular so its functionality can be tweaked or extended pretty well (the sky should be the limit). The end-goal is to come up with some code that you can drop onto every box on a lan that can run a ruby interpreter (jruby for instance). It would make the entire network go dark once an attacker starts grabbing banners or connecting to ports. >>> >>> This is going to be my first project to be released and it doesn't have a name yet. So, if anyone has any ideas for a name send them my way. Once I have it named I will put it in a public repo on github with a BSD license for anyone to get to and contribute. >>> >>> -Chris Benedict >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Pauldotcom mailing list >>> [email protected] >>> http://mail.pauldotcom.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pauldotcom >>> Main Web Site: http://pauldotcom.com >> _______________________________________________ >> Pauldotcom mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://mail.pauldotcom.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/pauldotcom >> Main Web Site:
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