Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-17 Thread Bjørn Mork
For fun and/or profit.  Like the purpose always has been.

Note that the definition of fun will vary.  But overcoming a challenge
of some sort is almost universally considered "fun".


Bjørn


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-16 Thread Mark Tinka




On 12/16/20 22:31, b...@theworld.com wrote:


I'm not so sure. If someone got the banks, credit card (fintech), big
online shopping, etc (tho not a lot of etc needed) on board, the "head
count" for that wouldn't be very large, and others would join
(particularly retail) just to not be left out...

One can build a quite different network on top of the existing
infrastructure at least to get started, NEWSTUFF/IP.

That would only then require buy-in by end-users but if that's what's
on their phone etc and the only way they can access banks, shopping,
etc.

People here would deliver all those packets since it'd just look like
IP and go from there. Reminds me of the old expression "when it's time
to hang the capitalists they will sell us the rope" (when it comes
time to replace this internet they will deliver our packets.)

The obvious (to me) change would be positive id of anyone accessing
that new network.

The voice system seems to have achieved this to about a 99% level
which is more than good enough. And it would be a boon to them also,
no more annoyingly free voice/video stuff. By which I mean if they
thought it was credible they might pony up a billion or two to get it
going.

Then if they hit some critical mass they can consider replacing IP and
routing regimens etc also (the goal being largely to secure it), on
top of the existing "wire" infrastructure.


All this would achieve is break-away networks, either atop or adjacent 
to the current Internet.


Considering that there are quite a few countries that have folk 
transacting more on their phones than via conventional banking means, 
with major content providers looking to get into that game, I don't see 
this working beyond a private experiment, that likely wouldn't get far.


But hey, it's 2020. Crystal balls aren't what they used to be.

Mark.


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-16 Thread bzs


I'm not so sure. If someone got the banks, credit card (fintech), big
online shopping, etc (tho not a lot of etc needed) on board, the "head
count" for that wouldn't be very large, and others would join
(particularly retail) just to not be left out...

One can build a quite different network on top of the existing
infrastructure at least to get started, NEWSTUFF/IP.

That would only then require buy-in by end-users but if that's what's
on their phone etc and the only way they can access banks, shopping,
etc.

People here would deliver all those packets since it'd just look like
IP and go from there. Reminds me of the old expression "when it's time
to hang the capitalists they will sell us the rope" (when it comes
time to replace this internet they will deliver our packets.)

The obvious (to me) change would be positive id of anyone accessing
that new network.

The voice system seems to have achieved this to about a 99% level
which is more than good enough. And it would be a boon to them also,
no more annoyingly free voice/video stuff. By which I mean if they
thought it was credible they might pony up a billion or two to get it
going.

Then if they hit some critical mass they can consider replacing IP and
routing regimens etc also (the goal being largely to secure it), on
top of the existing "wire" infrastructure.

On December 16, 2020 at 07:48 mark.ti...@seacom.com (Mark Tinka) wrote:
 > 
 > 
 > On 12/16/20 02:38, b...@theworld.com wrote:
 > 
 > > Somedays I wonder if it's some vast, well-funded, Spectre-like
 > > organization whose backers just want to see trust in the internet
 > > undermined in the public's eyes on behalf of their own non-internet or
 > > anti-internet (think: phone companies who'd love to charge you per
 > > email and web page access for example by forcing you onto some private
 > > network) enterprises, large bricks+mortars interests etc.
 > 
 > If it were, they'd be fighting a losing battle.
 > 
 > The Internet has acquired exponential scale. It would never operate in 
 > such a pay-to-click model.
 > 
 > Mark.

-- 
-Barry Shein

Software Tool & Die| b...@theworld.com | http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: +1 617-STD-WRLD   | 800-THE-WRLD
The World: Since 1989  | A Public Information Utility | *oo*


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-16 Thread Hal Murray
> Simple question: What's the purpose of obtaining illicit access to  random
> devices on the Internet these days ...

Aside from stealing user's information, there is also stealing industrial and 
diplomatic secrets.

The Chinese stole a lot of F-35 info.

The news is full of Russians hacking into US Treasury and Commerce 
Departments and probably more.



-- 
These are my opinions.  I hate spam.





Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-15 Thread Mark Tinka




On 12/16/20 02:38, b...@theworld.com wrote:


Somedays I wonder if it's some vast, well-funded, Spectre-like
organization whose backers just want to see trust in the internet
undermined in the public's eyes on behalf of their own non-internet or
anti-internet (think: phone companies who'd love to charge you per
email and web page access for example by forcing you onto some private
network) enterprises, large bricks+mortars interests etc.


If it were, they'd be fighting a losing battle.

The Internet has acquired exponential scale. It would never operate in 
such a pay-to-click model.


Mark.


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-15 Thread Donald Eastlake
On Mon, Dec 14, 2020 at 12:10 PM Miles Fidelman 
wrote:

> David Bass wrote:
> > It becomes more clear when you think about the options out there, and
> > get a little creative.  Now a days it’s definitely chess that’s being
> > played.
> And here I thought the purpose of hacking is (still) having fun - you
> know... hacking.
>
> As to chess... I've begun to think that the game to master is now Go...
> capturing territory, not pieces, and instantaneous global state changes.


https://fortune.com/2016/03/12/googles-go-computer-vs-human

Donald
 d3e...@gmail.com

Miles Fidelman
>
> --
> In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
> In practice, there is.   Yogi Berra
>
> Theory is when you know everything but nothing works.
> Practice is when everything works but no one knows why.
> In our lab, theory and practice are combined:
> nothing works and no one knows why.  ... unknown
>


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-15 Thread bzs


Somedays I wonder if it's some vast, well-funded, Spectre-like
organization whose backers just want to see trust in the internet
undermined in the public's eyes on behalf of their own non-internet or
anti-internet (think: phone companies who'd love to charge you per
email and web page access for example by forcing you onto some private
network) enterprises, large bricks+mortars interests etc.

-- 
-Barry Shein

Software Tool & Die| b...@theworld.com | http://www.TheWorld.com
Purveyors to the Trade | Voice: +1 617-STD-WRLD   | 800-THE-WRLD
The World: Since 1989  | A Public Information Utility | *oo*


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Miles Fidelman

Saku Ytti wrote:

On Mon, 14 Dec 2020 at 19:12, Miles Fidelman  wrote:


As to chess... I've begun to think that the game to master is now Go...
capturing territory, not pieces, and instantaneous global state changes.

Now implies change, when, in your mind, this changed from Chess to Go?

Not sure it's marked by a discrete moment in time.  More that the 
Chinese have been playing Go, while the West mostly still plays chess - 
and that seems like a problem.


I remember learning, decades ago, that there's a form of Chinese poetry, 
written with ideographs, that has to make sense both horizontally & 
vertically.   Essentially painting with ideographs.  A mind that can 
handle that, and a culture that nurtures that kind of thinking - that 
scares the shit out of me. (And definitely makes me want to do some more 
acid, to keep up.)


Miles

--
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, there is.   Yogi Berra

Theory is when you know everything but nothing works.
Practice is when everything works but no one knows why.
In our lab, theory and practice are combined:
nothing works and no one knows why.  ... unknown



Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Mark Tinka




On 12/14/20 19:44, Laszlo Hanyecz wrote:



This stuff is definitely the most visible type of scamming but this is 
not any different from swindling people at a flea market. It isn't so 
much hacking as just using internet to communicate with people and 
then tricking them.  I think this is a different skill set than 
gaining access to personal data though.


Gaining access to someone else's computer's files has historically not 
been a big deal, so I'm guessing it didn't become a huge problem 
because there was little to gain from doing it.  It might be 
inconvenient for people, it might be used as part of a larger con 
against a victim, but it still requires a lot more steps to profit 
from it.  We all know that we can't stop that from happening, but even 
going back to the early 90s we've had malware protection vendors 
making money off this fear, and the problem has now reached a point 
where the placebo security won't cut it and we'll have to start 
figuring this problem out.


The impact of these kinds of breaches has always been minor, but in 
the past 10 years we've placed more and more things into primary 
storage on a computer, including cryptographic secrets which only 
function if they're kept secret.  Losing a wallet full of credit cards 
isn't as bad as losing a wallet full of cash. There wasn't any way to 
put money into computer files before, but now there is. Even if only a 
few people carry money, if it's easy to steal millions of wallets and 
costs nothing, it's worth doing it for the hope of eventually hitting 
a money holder.


There is value in hacking services in the cloud to gain user information.

Right now, hacking credit rating clearing houses is big business, as an 
example, because almost every piece of single information of any 
economically-active member of society is on there. And there has been 
some success in obtaining that information, the effects of which we are 
not yet able to really quantify.


Mark.


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Sabri Berisha
- On Dec 12, 2020, at 2:26 PM, Peter E. Fry p...@tailbone.net wrote:

Hi,

> Simple question: What's the purpose of obtaining illicit access to
> random devices on the Internet these days

Don't underestimate the curiosity if pimply faced youth these days.
Wargames is still relevant.

Thanks,

Sabri


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Laszlo Hanyecz




On 2020-12-14 16:48, Mark Tinka wrote:



On 12/14/20 18:38, David Bass wrote:

It becomes more clear when you think about the options out there, and 
get a little creative.  Now a days it’s definitely chess that’s being 
played.


You're right, it really doesn't take much. Preying on humanity can 
yield great results.


One that has started springing up in my neck of the woods - to 
simplify car-jacking) - is to obtain a list of customers that 
subscribe to a vehicle tracking service. The thugs will then call a 
customer, claiming their tracking device is faulty and needs to be 
checked physically. The thugs will come to your home or office, tell 
you that in order to finalize the fix, they need to test drive your 
car. And boom, that's your car gone!


The hacking, now, IMHO, is to obtain user information to profile who 
is exploitable, and how. After that, low-tech rules.


Mark.



This stuff is definitely the most visible type of scamming but this is 
not any different from swindling people at a flea market.  It isn't so 
much hacking as just using internet to communicate with people and then 
tricking them.  I think this is a different skill set than gaining 
access to personal data though.


Gaining access to someone else's computer's files has historically not 
been a big deal, so I'm guessing it didn't become a huge problem because 
there was little to gain from doing it.  It might be inconvenient for 
people, it might be used as part of a larger con against a victim, but 
it still requires a lot more steps to profit from it.  We all know that 
we can't stop that from happening, but even going back to the early 90s 
we've had malware protection vendors making money off this fear, and the 
problem has now reached a point where the placebo security won't cut it 
and we'll have to start figuring this problem out.


The impact of these kinds of breaches has always been minor, but in the 
past 10 years we've placed more and more things into primary storage on 
a computer, including cryptographic secrets which only function if 
they're kept secret.  Losing a wallet full of credit cards isn't as bad 
as losing a wallet full of cash.  There wasn't any way to put money into 
computer files before, but now there is. Even if only a few people carry 
money, if it's easy to steal millions of wallets and costs nothing, it's 
worth doing it for the hope of eventually hitting a money holder.


-Laszlo






Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Saku Ytti
On Mon, 14 Dec 2020 at 19:12, Miles Fidelman  wrote:

> As to chess... I've begun to think that the game to master is now Go...
> capturing territory, not pieces, and instantaneous global state changes.

Now implies change, when, in your mind, this changed from Chess to Go?

-- 
  ++ytti


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Mark Tinka




On 12/14/20 19:08, Miles Fidelman wrote:

As to chess... I've begun to think that the game to master is now 
Go... capturing territory, not pieces, and instantaneous global state 
changes.


#TheQueensGambit :-).

Mark.


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Miles Fidelman

David Bass wrote:
It becomes more clear when you think about the options out there, and 
get a little creative.  Now a days it’s definitely chess that’s being 
played.
And here I thought the purpose of hacking is (still) having fun - you 
know... hacking.


As to chess... I've begun to think that the game to master is now Go... 
capturing territory, not pieces, and instantaneous global state changes.


Miles Fidelman

--
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
In practice, there is.   Yogi Berra

Theory is when you know everything but nothing works.
Practice is when everything works but no one knows why.
In our lab, theory and practice are combined:
nothing works and no one knows why.  ... unknown



Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Mark Tinka




On 12/14/20 18:38, David Bass wrote:

It becomes more clear when you think about the options out there, and 
get a little creative.  Now a days it’s definitely chess that’s being 
played.


You're right, it really doesn't take much. Preying on humanity can yield 
great results.


One that has started springing up in my neck of the woods - to simplify 
car-jacking) - is to obtain a list of customers that subscribe to a 
vehicle tracking service. The thugs will then call a customer, claiming 
their tracking device is faulty and needs to be checked physically. The 
thugs will come to your home or office, tell you that in order to 
finalize the fix, they need to test drive your car. And boom, that's 
your car gone!


The hacking, now, IMHO, is to obtain user information to profile who is 
exploitable, and how. After that, low-tech rules.


Mark.



Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread David Bass
It becomes more clear when you think about the options out there, and get a
little creative.  Now a days it’s definitely chess that’s being played.

This Solarwinds thing is going to be extremely interesting.

On Mon, Dec 14, 2020 at 11:35 AM Mark Tinka  wrote:

>
>
> On 12/14/20 18:23, Ryland Kremeier wrote:
>
> I would have to disagree. Considering the amount of people who have
> bitcoin, and even less the amount of people who farm it, or have farmed it
> before it became so difficult. It seems much more likely that the
> wide-spread infiltrations of every-day systems is for information and DDoS
> over bitcoins.
>
> I seriously doubt it’s that hard to sell information to companies, as they
> most likely don’t care how you got that information.
>
>
>
> If information wasn’t key, whether it be for selling to another party, or
> scraping that data for easy to social engineer targets; then I also don’t
> think that fraudulent calls would be so prevalent these days. Where the
> main target is older people who will fall for their basic tricks and end up
> losing potentially thousands per person.
>
>
> Tend to agree.
>
> Despite all the advice and mindless videos out there to help people
> protect their data and/or not fall for basic scams, a lot of people still
> do.
>
> Humans' capacity to want to believe in and trust others is a strong avenue
> that the scammers exploit to get paid. More so the older folk, yes, but
> even the young, tech-savvy; particularly those who have been too busy
> flipping between apps to realize that the Internet can be a dangerous
> place.
>
> You'd be surprised how innovative and simple these scams are, and actually
> becoming less and less sophisticated, which makes them even more dangerous.
>
>
> Mark.
>


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Mark Tinka



On 12/14/20 18:23, Ryland Kremeier wrote:

I would have to disagree. Considering the amount of people who have 
bitcoin, and even less the amount of people who farm it, or have 
farmed it before it became so difficult. It seems much more likely 
that the wide-spread infiltrations of every-day systems is for 
information and DDoS over bitcoins.


I seriously doubt it’s that hard to sell information to companies, as 
they most likely don’t care how you got that information.


If information wasn’t key, whether it be for selling to another party, 
or scraping that data for easy to social engineer targets; then I also 
don’t think that fraudulent calls would be so prevalent these days. 
Where the main target is older people who will fall for their basic 
tricks and end up losing potentially thousands per person.




Tend to agree.

Despite all the advice and mindless videos out there to help people 
protect their data and/or not fall for basic scams, a lot of people 
still do.


Humans' capacity to want to believe in and trust others is a strong 
avenue that the scammers exploit to get paid. More so the older folk, 
yes, but even the young, tech-savvy; particularly those who have been 
too busy flipping between apps to realize that the Internet can be a 
dangerous place.


You'd be surprised how innovative and simple these scams are, and 
actually becoming less and less sophisticated, which makes them even 
more dangerous.


Mark.


RE: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Ryland Kremeier
I would have to disagree. Considering the amount of people who have bitcoin, 
and even less the amount of people who farm it, or have farmed it before it 
became so difficult. It seems much more likely that the wide-spread 
infiltrations of every-day systems is for information and DDoS over bitcoins.

I seriously doubt it’s that hard to sell information to companies, as they most 
likely don’t care how you got that information.

If information wasn’t key, whether it be for selling to another party, or 
scraping that data for easy to social engineer targets; then I also don’t think 
that fraudulent calls would be so prevalent these days. Where the main target 
is older people who will fall for their basic tricks and end up losing 
potentially thousands per person.

-- Ryland

From: Laszlo Hanyecz<mailto:las...@heliacal.net>
Sent: Monday, December 14, 2020 10:17 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org<mailto:nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

Bitcoin.

There wasn't much purpose to 'hacking' for a long time.  Even when
talking about DDoS stuff, it's still just temporary vandalism, it's only
an inconvenience, and it can be undone pretty quickly.  The whole idea
of providing security has been turned into a wink-wink scam where people
pretend to do busy work for money but everyone knows you'll still get
breached and it doesn't really matter, so long as you can blame it on
someone else and it's in the fine print.  Look at what a business DDoS
has become, both on the provider and the protection side.

Stealing data is also a thing but even that is not inherently valuable
unless you can blackmail the victim or sell it to a buyer. That kind of
business requires more skills than just computer hacking to pull off,
and carries a lot of risk in dealing with other humans who already know
you're a data thief.

This all changed with bitcoin, because now simply gaining access and
finding the data is the pay dirt and it can be claimed anonymously
without dealing with any other humans.

-Laszlo


On 2020-12-12 22:26, Peter E. Fry wrote:
>
> Simple question: What's the purpose of obtaining illicit access to
> random devices on the Internet these days, considering that a large
> majority of attacks are now launched from cheap, readily available and
> poorly managed/overseen "cloud" services?  Finding anything worthwhile
> to steal on random machines on the Internet seems unlikely, as does
> obtaining access superior (in e.g. location, bandwidth, anonymity,
> etc.) to the service from which the attack was launched.
>
>
> I was thinking about this the other day as I was poking at my
> firewall, and hopped onto the archives (here and elsewhere) to see if
> I could find any discussion.  I found a few mentions (e.g. "Microsoft
> is hacking my Asterisk???"), but I didn't catch any mention of
> purpose.  Am I missing something obvious (either a purpose or a
> discussion of such)?  Have I lost my mind entirely? (Can't hurt to
> check, as I'd likely be the last to know.)
>
>
> Peter E. Fry
>
>



Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Laszlo Hanyecz

Bitcoin.

There wasn't much purpose to 'hacking' for a long time.  Even when 
talking about DDoS stuff, it's still just temporary vandalism, it's only 
an inconvenience, and it can be undone pretty quickly.  The whole idea 
of providing security has been turned into a wink-wink scam where people 
pretend to do busy work for money but everyone knows you'll still get 
breached and it doesn't really matter, so long as you can blame it on 
someone else and it's in the fine print.  Look at what a business DDoS 
has become, both on the provider and the protection side.


Stealing data is also a thing but even that is not inherently valuable 
unless you can blackmail the victim or sell it to a buyer. That kind of 
business requires more skills than just computer hacking to pull off, 
and carries a lot of risk in dealing with other humans who already know 
you're a data thief.


This all changed with bitcoin, because now simply gaining access and 
finding the data is the pay dirt and it can be claimed anonymously 
without dealing with any other humans.


-Laszlo


On 2020-12-12 22:26, Peter E. Fry wrote:


Simple question: What's the purpose of obtaining illicit access to 
random devices on the Internet these days, considering that a large 
majority of attacks are now launched from cheap, readily available and 
poorly managed/overseen "cloud" services?  Finding anything worthwhile 
to steal on random machines on the Internet seems unlikely, as does 
obtaining access superior (in e.g. location, bandwidth, anonymity, 
etc.) to the service from which the attack was launched.



I was thinking about this the other day as I was poking at my 
firewall, and hopped onto the archives (here and elsewhere) to see if 
I could find any discussion.  I found a few mentions (e.g. "Microsoft 
is hacking my Asterisk???"), but I didn't catch any mention of 
purpose.  Am I missing something obvious (either a purpose or a 
discussion of such)?  Have I lost my mind entirely? (Can't hurt to 
check, as I'd likely be the last to know.)



Peter E. Fry






Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Rich Kulawiec
On Mon, Dec 14, 2020 at 09:58:01AM -0500, Tom Beecher wrote:
> Questionable cloud / VPS / hosting companies are great for spammers and
> botnet C, but not so great for DDoS "ion cannons". You still need a large
> volume of geographically diverse endpoints for those to be effective.

To piggyback on this: when launching a DDoS, diversity along multiple
axes is helpful: geography, topology, connectivity, operating system, etc.
Each additional form of diversity slightly raises the bar for defenders.

Also, every compromised device may be a source of useful/saleable data,
or the gateway to more of the same or to more valuable targets or to the
compromise of people.  The IoT is particularly fertile ground for this
because to a very good first approximation, "IoT security" is an oxymoron.

--rsk


Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread James R Cutler
The probable "purpose of obtaining illicit access to random devices on the 
Internet these days” is to create botnets to attack more lucrative targets or 
to employ them as gateway devices to provide access to local networks which may 
contain targets of interest.

James R. Cutler
james.cut...@consultant.com
GPG keys: hkps://hkps.pool.sks-keyservers.net



> On Dec 12, 2020, at 5:26 PM, Peter E. Fry  wrote:
> 
> 
> Simple question: What's the purpose of obtaining illicit access to random 
> devices on the Internet these days, considering that a large majority of 
> attacks are now launched from cheap, readily available and poorly 
> managed/overseen "cloud" services?  Finding anything worthwhile to steal on 
> random machines on the Internet seems unlikely, as does obtaining access 
> superior (in e.g. location, bandwidth, anonymity, etc.) to the service from 
> which the attack was launched.
> 
> 
> I was thinking about this the other day as I was poking at my firewall, and 
> hopped onto the archives (here and elsewhere) to see if I could find any 
> discussion.  I found a few mentions (e.g. "Microsoft is hacking my 
> Asterisk???"), but I didn't catch any mention of purpose.  Am I missing 
> something obvious (either a purpose or a discussion of such)?  Have I lost my 
> mind entirely?  (Can't hurt to check, as I'd likely be the last to know.)
> 
> 
> Peter E. Fry
> 
> 



RE: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Ryland Kremeier
I think you’re coming at it the wrong way. It’s not going to be one, or a 
couple of dudes behind a screen like in the movies. It’s ran autonomously for 
as long as possible. Gathering information on easily accessible devices and the 
like. Any information gathered is information that can be sold, or used 
otherwise depending on what they’re grabbing.

-- Ryland

From: Peter E.Fry<mailto:p...@tailbone.net>
Sent: Monday, December 14, 2020 8:55 AM
To: nanog@nanog.org<mailto:nanog@nanog.org>
Subject: "Hacking" these days - purpose?


Simple question: What's the purpose of obtaining illicit access to
random devices on the Internet these days, considering that a large
majority of attacks are now launched from cheap, readily available and
poorly managed/overseen "cloud" services?  Finding anything worthwhile
to steal on random machines on the Internet seems unlikely, as does
obtaining access superior (in e.g. location, bandwidth, anonymity,
etc.) to the service from which the attack was launched.


I was thinking about this the other day as I was poking at my
firewall, and hopped onto the archives (here and elsewhere) to see if
I could find any discussion.  I found a few mentions (e.g. "Microsoft
is hacking my Asterisk???"), but I didn't catch any mention of
purpose.  Am I missing something obvious (either a purpose or a
discussion of such)?  Have I lost my mind entirely?  (Can't hurt to
check, as I'd likely be the last to know.)


Peter E. Fry




Re: "Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Tom Beecher
Questionable cloud / VPS / hosting companies are great for spammers and
botnet C, but not so great for DDoS "ion cannons". You still need a large
volume of geographically diverse endpoints for those to be effective.

On Mon, Dec 14, 2020 at 9:52 AM Peter E. Fry  wrote:

>
> Simple question: What's the purpose of obtaining illicit access to
> random devices on the Internet these days, considering that a large
> majority of attacks are now launched from cheap, readily available and
> poorly managed/overseen "cloud" services?  Finding anything worthwhile
> to steal on random machines on the Internet seems unlikely, as does
> obtaining access superior (in e.g. location, bandwidth, anonymity,
> etc.) to the service from which the attack was launched.
>
>
> I was thinking about this the other day as I was poking at my
> firewall, and hopped onto the archives (here and elsewhere) to see if
> I could find any discussion.  I found a few mentions (e.g. "Microsoft
> is hacking my Asterisk???"), but I didn't catch any mention of
> purpose.  Am I missing something obvious (either a purpose or a
> discussion of such)?  Have I lost my mind entirely?  (Can't hurt to
> check, as I'd likely be the last to know.)
>
>
> Peter E. Fry
>
>
>


"Hacking" these days - purpose?

2020-12-14 Thread Peter E . Fry



Simple question: What's the purpose of obtaining illicit access to 
random devices on the Internet these days, considering that a large 
majority of attacks are now launched from cheap, readily available and 
poorly managed/overseen "cloud" services?  Finding anything worthwhile 
to steal on random machines on the Internet seems unlikely, as does 
obtaining access superior (in e.g. location, bandwidth, anonymity, 
etc.) to the service from which the attack was launched.



I was thinking about this the other day as I was poking at my 
firewall, and hopped onto the archives (here and elsewhere) to see if 
I could find any discussion.  I found a few mentions (e.g. "Microsoft 
is hacking my Asterisk???"), but I didn't catch any mention of 
purpose.  Am I missing something obvious (either a purpose or a 
discussion of such)?  Have I lost my mind entirely?  (Can't hurt to 
check, as I'd likely be the last to know.)



Peter E. Fry