Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Matthew Huff
We have recently gotten complaints of harrassing and high pressure sales scams 
orginating from our NOC's phone number. Since the number is a virtual number on 
the PBX, it can't be used for outgoing calls. I assume the scammers choose the 
number from the whois db. Anyone else seen this happening? Any suggestions on 
whom we should contact?




Matthew Huff   | One Manhattanville Rd
OTA Management LLC | Purchase, NY 10577
http://www.ox.com  | Phone: 914-460-4039
aim: matthewbhuff  | Fax:   914-460-4139



attachment: Matthew Huff.vcf

Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Dan White

On 06/10/10 10:29 -0400, Matthew Huff wrote:

We have recently gotten complaints of harrassing and high pressure sales scams 
orginating from our NOC's phone number. Since the number is a virtual number on 
the PBX, it can't be used for outgoing calls. I assume the scammers choose the 
number from the whois db. Anyone else seen this happening? Any suggestions on 
whom we should contact?


Could be Caller ID spoofing. If so, have a recipient of the call perform a
trap and trace to find the originator of the call (doing so may require you
to file a police report to find who's making the calls, depending on your
jurisdiction).

If your PBX is SIP based, you might be victim of a SIP registration hijack,
which are on the rise, based on traffic we've been seeing in our network.

--
Dan White



Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread William Herrin
On Wed, Oct 6, 2010 at 10:37 AM, Dan White dwh...@olp.net wrote:
 If your PBX is SIP based, you might be victim of a SIP registration hijack,
 which are on the rise, based on traffic we've been seeing in our network.

I had my unpublished asterisk box up for all of two days before
getting half a megabit per second worth of false SIP registration
attempts. Filled /var/log. I had to write a script to dynamically
filter source IPs with too many failures.

Regards,
Bill Herrin

-- 
William D. Herrin  her...@dirtside.com  b...@herrin.us
3005 Crane Dr. .. Web: http://bill.herrin.us/
Falls Church, VA 22042-3004



RE: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Matthew Huff
Our system is PRI based, not sip.


Matthew Huff   | One Manhattanville Rd
OTA Management LLC | Purchase, NY 10577
http://www.ox.com  | Phone: 914-460-4039
aim: matthewbhuff  | Fax:   914-460-4139



 -Original Message-
 From: wher...@gmail.com [mailto:wher...@gmail.com] On Behalf Of William Herrin
 Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2010 11:15 AM
 To: Dan White
 Cc: Matthew Huff; (nanog@nanog.org)
 Subject: Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid
 
 On Wed, Oct 6, 2010 at 10:37 AM, Dan White dwh...@olp.net wrote:
  If your PBX is SIP based, you might be victim of a SIP registration hijack,
  which are on the rise, based on traffic we've been seeing in our network.
 
 I had my unpublished asterisk box up for all of two days before
 getting half a megabit per second worth of false SIP registration
 attempts. Filled /var/log. I had to write a script to dynamically
 filter source IPs with too many failures.
 
 Regards,
 Bill Herrin
 
 --
 William D. Herrin  her...@dirtside.com  b...@herrin.us
 3005 Crane Dr. .. Web: http://bill.herrin.us/
 Falls Church, VA 22042-3004
attachment: Matthew Huff.vcf

RE: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Jon Lewis

On Wed, 6 Oct 2010, Matthew Huff wrote:


Our system is PRI based, not sip.


PRI for origination and termination...but what are your phones?  Old 
school or VOIP/SIP?  If your phone system supports SIP clients, it really 
ought to be IP restricted to only allow your phones access, or use 
something like fail2ban to stop the SIP scanners from eventually gaining 
access.


--
 Jon Lewis, MCP :)   |  I route
 Senior Network Engineer |  therefore you are
 Atlantic Net|
_ http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp for PGP public key_



RE: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Matthew Huff
Digital all the way through. No sip. No outside access to the PBX subnet 
either. Just a mininute ago our telco has verified that the calls are not 
orginating from out phone system. It's a simple caller id spoofing. People 
don't realize that caller id can be spoofed and therefore are 100% sure that we 
are makign the harrasing calls. 

Just wanted nanog to be aware of this since the only two numbers that this has 
happened with are the ones in our ARIN whois records.




Matthew Huff   | One Manhattanville Rd
OTA Management LLC | Purchase, NY 10577
http://www.ox.com  | Phone: 914-460-4039
aim: matthewbhuff  | Fax:   914-460-4139



 -Original Message-
 From: Jon Lewis [mailto:jle...@lewis.org]
 Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2010 11:34 AM
 To: Matthew Huff
 Cc: '(nanog@nanog.org)'
 Subject: RE: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid
 
 On Wed, 6 Oct 2010, Matthew Huff wrote:
 
  Our system is PRI based, not sip.
 
 PRI for origination and termination...but what are your phones?  Old
 school or VOIP/SIP?  If your phone system supports SIP clients, it really
 ought to be IP restricted to only allow your phones access, or use
 something like fail2ban to stop the SIP scanners from eventually gaining
 access.
 
 --
   Jon Lewis, MCP :)   |  I route
   Senior Network Engineer |  therefore you are
   Atlantic Net|
 _ http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp for PGP public key_
attachment: Matthew Huff.vcf

Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Brielle Bruns

On 10/6/10 9:43 AM, Matthew Huff wrote:

Digital all the way through. No sip. No outside access to the PBX
subnet either. Just a mininute ago our telco has verified that the
calls are not orginating from out phone system. It's a simple caller
id spoofing. People don't realize that caller id can be spoofed and
therefore are 100% sure that we are makign the harrasing calls.

Just wanted nanog to be aware of this since the only two numbers that
this has happened with are the ones in our ARIN whois records.





I'm currently dealing with an engineering firm in Florida that I believe
is having the same issue.  Getting calls at 2am, 3am MDT and at the
exact same time 12 hours later to one of my numbers which has call
screening.

Left a message with their IT department, so hoping they follow up and
return my call.

--
Brielle Bruns
The Summit Open Source Development Group
http://www.sosdg.org/ http://www.ahbl.org



RE: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Jon Lewis

On Wed, 6 Oct 2010, Matthew Huff wrote:

Digital all the way through. No sip. No outside access to the PBX subnet 
either. Just a mininute ago our telco has verified that the calls are 
not orginating from out phone system. It's a simple caller id spoofing. 
People don't realize that caller id can be spoofed and therefore are 
100% sure that we are makign the harrasing calls.


Some do.  Anyone with control of a phone system with digital lines (i.e. 
asterisk with PRI) can trivially set callerID to whatever they want. 
There are perfectly legitimate, and not so legitimate uses for this.


However, SIP scanning and brute forcing has become really common, so it's 
about as likely that a phone system has been compromised as someone is 
forging callerID to one of its numbers.


--
 Jon Lewis, MCP :)   |  I route
 Senior Network Engineer |  therefore you are
 Atlantic Net|
_ http://www.lewis.org/~jlewis/pgp for PGP public key_



Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Joe Greco
 On Wed, 6 Oct 2010, Matthew Huff wrote:
 
  Digital all the way through. No sip. No outside access to the PBX subnet 
  either. Just a mininute ago our telco has verified that the calls are 
  not orginating from out phone system. It's a simple caller id spoofing. 
  People don't realize that caller id can be spoofed and therefore are 
  100% sure that we are makign the harrasing calls.
 
 Some do.  Anyone with control of a phone system with digital lines (i.e. 
 asterisk with PRI) can trivially set callerID to whatever they want. 

That's not correct; what is true is that *some* LEC's do not filter
the callerID submitted and so this is *sometimes* true.  There are
many examples where a LEC does not accept random callerID's from a
PRI customer.  Sometimes this is even problematic, for example, when
the LEC helpfully inserts the callerID *they* think is correct and
it's actually wrong.

 There are perfectly legitimate, and not so legitimate uses for this.

Yes.  It's very useful, for example, to be able to generate your cell
phone's callerID from your PBX, since people have a habit of dialing
you from the number you called, even if you specifically asked them to
use a different callback number.

 However, SIP scanning and brute forcing has become really common, so it's 
 about as likely that a phone system has been compromised as someone is 
 forging callerID to one of its numbers.

Correct.

... JG
-- 
Joe Greco - sol.net Network Services - Milwaukee, WI - http://www.sol.net
We call it the 'one bite at the apple' rule. Give me one chance [and] then I
won't contact you again. - Direct Marketing Ass'n position on e-mail spam(CNN)
With 24 million small businesses in the US alone, that's way too many apples.



Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread J. Oquendo
William Herrin wrote:
 On Wed, Oct 6, 2010 at 10:37 AM, Dan White dwh...@olp.net wrote:
   
 If your PBX is SIP based, you might be victim of a SIP registration hijack,
 which are on the rise, based on traffic we've been seeing in our network.
 

 I had my unpublished asterisk box up for all of two days before
 getting half a megabit per second worth of false SIP registration
 attempts. Filled /var/log. I had to write a script to dynamically
 filter source IPs with too many failures.

 Regards,
 Bill Herrin

   

A Simple Asterisk Based Toll Fraud Prevention Script
http://www.infiltrated.net/asterisk-ips.html

Cheap marketing of a free RBL for VoIP: http://www.infiltrated.net/voipabuse

Anyhow, I spoke about this last week (toll fraud abuse via IP PBX
tricksters). Show # 275
http://www.talkshoe.com/talkshoe/web/talkCast.jsp?masterId=22622cmd=tc

http://voipsa.org/blog/2010/09/29/voip-attackers-sometimes-they-come-back/
http://voipsa.org/blog/2010/09/28/voip-abuse-project/


-- 

=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
J. Oquendo
SGFA, SGFE, C|EH, CNDA, CHFI, OSCP, CPT

It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to
ruin it. If you think about that, you'll do things
differently. - Warren Buffett

227C 5D35 7DCB 0893 95AA  4771 1DCE 1FD1 5CCD 6B5E
http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=getsearch=0x5CCD6B5E




Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Graham Beneke

On 06/10/2010 17:15, William Herrin wrote:

I had my unpublished asterisk box up for all of two days before
getting half a megabit per second worth of false SIP registration
attempts.


The script kiddies and botnets seem to by trying hard.

I started announcing a brand new RIR allocation about 4 days ago and 
decided to tcpdump the background noise on the prefix before it gets 
used in production. About 80% of the traffic is systematic scanning on 
port 5060 across the entire prefix.


--
Graham Beneke



Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Scott Howard
On Wed, Oct 6, 2010 at 8:55 AM, Jon Lewis jle...@lewis.org wrote:

 Some do.  Anyone with control of a phone system with digital lines (i.e.
 asterisk with PRI) can trivially set callerID to whatever they want. There
 are perfectly legitimate, and not so legitimate uses for this.


You don't even need the PRI.  There's a number of SIP providers that will
allow you to set CallerID.  In some cases they do some level of verification
first, but in many cases it's just a free-for-all.

There were some laws passed recently which makes faking caller-id illegal,
although I'm not sure exactly what the details are (eg, I'm fairly sure
sending your cell phone number from a desk phone is fine as you own both of
them).

  Scott.


Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread J. Oquendo
Scott Howard wrote:
 On Wed, Oct 6, 2010 at 8:55 AM, Jon Lewis jle...@lewis.org wrote:

   
 Some do.  Anyone with control of a phone system with digital lines (i.e.
 asterisk with PRI) can trivially set callerID to whatever they want. There
 are perfectly legitimate, and not so legitimate uses for this.

 

 You don't even need the PRI.  There's a number of SIP providers that will
 allow you to set CallerID.  In some cases they do some level of verification
 first, but in many cases it's just a free-for-all.

 There were some laws passed recently which makes faking caller-id illegal,
 although I'm not sure exactly what the details are (eg, I'm fairly sure
 sending your cell phone number from a desk phone is fine as you own both of
 them).

   Scott.

   
It's HR 1258 the Truth in Caller ID Act however, means nothing to
someone outside the United States and this is where the issue seems to
stem from (a huge portion).

So imagine the following:

YourCompany -- VoIP_Peer -- Euro_Company

Someone compromises something in Euro_Company, unbeknownst to that
company, they're sending YOU traffic which you in turn pass (remember
you trusted them here). Guess what? Euro_Company's PBX was sending false
Caller ID. Should you be the one held liable as an ITSP? Further
consideration:

You -- Call Dell Support -- call re-routes to West Bumfork India --
Callee gets your callback
Yourphone -- ring ring ring -- CID: Dell 12125551234

Where is the truth there?

Anyhow, I don't know if Obama signed this into law yet.

On my phone right now, I set the caller ID to the main number of my
company so that clients take the appropriate steps in going through
Customer Service. Guess what? When I'm at home and on-call my Caller-ID
is set to my company's main number so that clients don't call me at home
on a Sunday morning. Am I committing a despicable act by doing this?
Is it any different than unplugging my Snom, Cisco or Polycom and
bringing it home which yields the same results.

While I do recognize the abuse (spammers, telemarketers, etc), I don't
see how a bill is going to stop this from occurring. Who knows maybe
blacklisting ITSP providers. Should we play a guessing game: Well, it
is coming from Global Crossing...

-- 

=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
J. Oquendo
SGFA, SGFE, C|EH, CNDA, CHFI, OSCP, CPT

It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to
ruin it. If you think about that, you'll do things
differently. - Warren Buffett

227C 5D35 7DCB 0893 95AA  4771 1DCE 1FD1 5CCD 6B5E
http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=getsearch=0x5CCD6B5E




RE: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread FEARGAL_LEDWIDGE
From: sc...@doc.net.au [mailto:sc...@doc.net.au] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2010 2:26 PM
Subject: Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

There were some laws passed recently which makes faking caller-id illegal,
although I'm not sure exactly what the details are (eg, I'm fairly sure
sending your cell phone number from a desk phone is fine as you own both of
them).

In the US - it's not quite law yet. 

The bill in question is H.R. 1258: Truth in Caller ID Act of 2010. It was 
passed by the house in April 2010 - but has not yet been passed by the Senate. 
A similar bill was passed by the Senate previously - so it's only a matter of 
time.

Specifically - the bill will make it illegal to cause any caller ID service to 
transmit misleading or inaccurate caller ID information.

Changing your caller-id for legitimate non-nefarious purposes will still be 
allowed.


Feargal



Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Randy Bush
not directly related, but i get occasional harrassing calls from
mental/emotional children who are using whois.  it's amusing but
basically pathetic.

randy



RE: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread John van Oppen
We get people calling our noc numbers pretty often trying to report abuse for 
other people's networks...  that is always fun

John van Oppen  / AS11404

-Original Message-
From: Randy Bush [mailto:ra...@psg.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2010 3:16 PM
To: Matthew Huff
Cc: ' (nanog@nanog.org)'
Subject: Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

not directly related, but i get occasional harrassing calls from
mental/emotional children who are using whois.  it's amusing but
basically pathetic.

randy




Re: Scam telemarketers spoofing our NOC phone number for callerid

2010-10-06 Thread Randy Bush
 We get people calling our noc numbers pretty often trying to report
 abuse for other people's networks...  that is always fun
 not directly related, but i get occasional harrassing calls from
 mental/emotional children who are using whois.  it's amusing but
 basically pathetic.

no, i mean classic children's behavior pretending they are the police or
whatever.

randy