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Are Isis hackers trying to destroy the internet?
EXCLUSIVE:
Cybersecurity experts and Anonymous hackers believe an Isis app is
being used to create a botnet aimed at targeting core internet serversFB
A
smartphone app used by Islamic State (Isis) to spread news and
propaganda could be behind the massive attack on the internet's core
infrastructure that took place earlier this month, according to several
cybersecurity experts.
Analysis of the IS Amaq Agency app has
revealed that it was potentially the source of a botnet created to
perform a massive DDoS (distributed denial of service) attack on root
name servers. A more powerful attack in the future could cause
significant disruption to internet services and could even temporarily
take down the internet.
The
cyberattack, which took place between 30 November and 1 December,
targeted the 13 internet root name servers that are responsible for
supporting almost the entire internet. Cybersecurity experts,
high-profile hackers and members of the hacktivist collective Anonymous
now claim that a smartphone app was the most likely culprit for the botnet attack,
which flooded the servers with five million queries per second at the
peak of the attack. It is estimated that as few as 18,000 devices
running the app through Wi-Fi networks would have been capable of
creating such traffic. The Amaq Agency app is used by IS to spread news and propagandaScreengrab/ CtrlSecAnalysis
of the Amaq Agency app found a suspicious encrypted packet containing
the 13 root name server addresses. It is not possible to determine how
many people use the app as it is not available through Google Play or
other app stores, while those in charge of root name servers have
refused to speculate on the cause of the attack.
"I feel certain that the IS news app was the source of the DDoS attack," cybersecurity expert John McAfee tells IBTimes UK. "One of my researchers has discovered encrypted packets being sent to the Amaq Agency news app.
"We
found the 13 Root Server Addresses in the app memory while the app was
running. The addresses did not appear inside the static app. The
addresses therefore had to be decrypted at run time. Why would they
encrypt the addresses inside the app unless they were trying to hide the
true purpose of the app? This is the smoking gun we were looking for."
John
Cassaretto, founder of web security firm BlackCert, believes that if
the Amaq Agency app is behind the botnet, then the recent attack on the
root name servers may have just been the first wave. The incident report
from Root-servers.org did not speculate on the source of the DDoS attack and official investigations are still underway. Versign's graph shows a massive stream of traffic suddenly flooded its root name server between 30 November and 1 DecemberVerisign
"What
is clear is that there is much speculation, but of course there is also
a lot of evaluation of data going on," Patrik Fältström, head of
research and development at Netnod, tells IBTimes UK. "If and when
people (including Netnod) have more data to share, we will do so."
Root name server Verisign released a blogpost
giving its perspective on the attacks, alongside a video that it claims
is able to demonstrate that the source addresses were spoofed.
According
to McAfee, this is not proof that the IP addresses were not real. "This
is utter nonsense," McAfee says. "If someone is going to write a script
to do a DDoS attack, why go to all of the trouble to write a set of
different spoofing algorithms? More telling yet is that the bulk of the
blogpost was dedicated to giving us a sense of relief and trust in
Verisign. If they admitted that the IP addresses were real, there would
be panic because there are no safeguards for such an event."
Threat of cyber terrorism and Western vulnerabilities
Until recently, the cyber capabilities of IS have been thought to be very limited. Despite declaring a cyberwar against the West and proclaiming a "cyber caliphate", no major attacks have previously been attributed to the group.
Digital strategy consultant Lars Hilse suggested in a report on cyber terrorism
that there are "gaping vulnerabilities" in Western infrastructure that
would make easy targets for IS, while recruitment of hackers would not
be an issue considering the $2bn war chest at its disposal. A separate
report published this week by Kronos Advisory, titled The Imminent
Front, states that is is likely skilled hackers have already been
recruited by IS.
"We assess with high confidence [that Daesh] has
recruited individuals who possess technical skills required to conduct
sophisticated cyber offensive operations," the report states. "It is
assessed with low confidence that an absence of cyber attacks targeting
critical infrastructure is an indicator this terrorist group is not
intent upon expanding its cyber terrorism capabilities."
Should
an attack on the root name servers be large enough that it overwhelms
them, there are thousands of secondary servers around the world that
could function as temporary replacements, but the majority are cached
systems that only hold the data for a temporary period of time. There
are 370 more permanent servers, but taking these servers down through a
similar DDoS attack would be trivial in comparison.
What would happen if Isis destroyed the internet?
If
successful, the global impact of such an attack would be catastrophic.
Information security expert Eddie Mize has previously hypothesised about
what would happen in the event of a global internet outage, suggesting
that due to the West's reliance on the internet for critical
infrastructure, everything from air travel to emergency services would
be affected. Mize also believes that a catastrophic DDoS attack on the
DNS infrastructure is possible using enough mobile devices.
"Imagine
if the internet went down for several days, I believe we would see
significant power grid failure and potentially loss of emergency
services," Mize tells IBTimes UK. "This could mean the
failure of dams and flood controls, power and water distribution,
natural gas distribution and control failure, and more.
"Perhaps
the most alarming aspect would be to the financial sector. I believe
that loss of the internet for even a two week period could cause enough
disruption to financial institutions that consumers would lose
confidence and this could be catastrophic to the markets. All of this
could set up a chain reaction that could send the public in to a
panicked tailspin."
It said Daljinder Kaur gave birth to a baby boy at a fertility clinic in the northern Indian state of Haryana, following two years of in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment. The report noted that though Kaur doesn’t possess any official paper to justify her age, but doctors at the hospital have registered her age as 72 years. It noted that if Kaur’s age is correct, that makes her one of the world’s oldest woman to become mother.
I believe that we were all sent here for a reason and that we all have significance in the world. I genuinely feel that we are all blessed with unique gifts. The expression of our gifts contributes to a cause greater than us.
The son of former Nigerian military head of state Yakubu Gowon is due to return to Nigeria after spending 22 years in a US prison after being convicted on drug-related charges. It is believed Musa Gowon was released from the Taft Correctional Facility Bakersfield, California, after US President Barack Obama granted him pardon earlier in November.
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