Thursday, March 15, 2007

Spam storm needs ISP action, urges security chief

Windows insecurity leads to the creation of botnets which are used to send oceans of spam to everyone. This is about a proposal to try to stem that tide. Of course if spam is stopped the botnets will still be there and used by the criminal gangs for other purposes. Ed.
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Spam storm needs ISP action, urges security chief


By Will Sturgeon

Published: Wednesday 14 March 2007

Ispa, the UK's internet service providers' association, will today make a presentation to the House of Lords science and technology committee on computer security and spam.

The session, which follows the submission of a written response, coincides with claims the number of compromised PCs – known as botnets – in the UK has tripled over the past year.

And one security expert claims ISPs are still shirking their responsibilities.

These criminals have a very advanced command and control structure.


Speaking about the growing problem of botnets and the deluge of spam they create, David Rand, CTO of security company Trend Micro, told silicon.com: "I absolutely believe this is the ISPs' responsibility. Yet top ISPs still aren't doing anything."

Rand said: "It's not like the ISPs can't tell this is going on. They can see all this on their networks."

Many leading ISPs currently refuse to take measures such as blocking port 25 traffic, a move which Rand claimed would affect very few users sending legitimate email, while blocking the port used to relay email via the internet on compromised machines.

And he expressed doubts that ISPs would ever volunteer such measures to legislators because they fear taking greater responsibility for the use of their networks and the implications of increased operating costs.

A spokesman for Ispa said it understands the majority of spam originates from compromised PCs connected to its members' broadband services - and those of other ISPs - often unbeknownst to customers. But he said it is not the ISPs' lone responsibility to solve the problem, suggesting legislation and end-user education are essential tools in the fight.

The Ispa spokesman told silicon.com: "No ISP wants to tolerate any criminal activity on their network."

He also denied suggestions ISPs have been slow or unwilling to act on the matter. "If there was a flick-switch solution to this, we would have done it," he said.

Trend Micro's Rand told silicon.com the number of infected PCs has tripled in the UK over the past year, according to his company's research.

This means more UK homes and businesses are operating compromised PCs which - as well as sending vast volumes of spam - could potentially be plundered for sensitive data such as passwords or bank details.

Rand told silicon.com one reason for the upsurge in rogue activity on European networks dates back to a major fibre cut between China and Taiwan in December 2006. At that time botnet activity switched dramatically from China to Europe within around six minutes, he said.

Rand said millions of infected machines in Europe were brought online by the criminals who control them remotely, showing not only a vast amount of redundancy built into these criminal networks but also "highly sophisticated" business continuity plans.

He said: "These criminals have a very advanced command and control structure. We've got a real challenge ahead of us to take that down. And we've not managed it yet."

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