-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 - -- Hank Nussbacher <hank@efes.iucc.ac.il> wrote:
At 11:32 PM 27-08-08 -0500, John Lee wrote:
Thanks guys, going back to my Comer one more time. My issue, question was whether the organization doing the hijacking controlled all of the routers in the new modified path or only some of them?
John (ISDN) Lee
They didn't have control of any routers other than their own. What they had to find is a single clueless upstream ISP that would allow them to announce prefixes that didn't belong to them.
*bing* Trust is the major exploit here. That has never been "new". - - ferg -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP Desktop 9.6.3 (Build 3017) wj8DBQFItkFQq1pz9mNUZTMRAgqHAJ4ogryvjftxw5CQTWhf0c7VyBBXyQCfUo9w qdK2kEWHY/B1AU/rGNikOlg= =d/L7 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- "Fergie", a.k.a. Paul Ferguson Engineering Architecture for the Internet fergdawg(at)netzero.net ferg's tech blog: http://fergdawg.blogspot.com/