Well, Its not like peoples are still using telnet/ssh/web with a password/enable on the net... anymore. We do PCI and it took the better part of 6 month for a Customer Network Engineer to get it right. ( The annoying part is that we cannot do the work for them, we can only hope they get a paper cut every time we sent out a report about that security risk ) But I'm still curious what was the attack vector... As for my ~20ish Cisco device in the wild, they're all pretty healthy. ----- Alain Hebert ahebert@pubnix.net PubNIX Inc. 50 boul. St-Charles P.O. Box 26770 Beaconsfield, Quebec H9W 6G7 Tel: 514-990-5911 http://www.pubnix.net Fax: 514-990-9443 On 04/13/15 17:51, Steve Mikulasik wrote:
They may want to check if some network engineer got fired recently. Usually these sorts of things relate to a human problem rather than a technical attack.
Stephen Mikulasik
-----Original Message----- From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces@nanog.org] On Behalf Of Rashed Alwarrag Sent: Monday, April 13, 2015 3:29 PM To: nanog@nanog.org Subject: Cisco Routers Vulnerability
Hi Today we have a lot of customers report that their Cisco routers got a root access and the IOS got erased , is there any known vulnerability in cisco products thats they report in their Security alerts about this recently ? is there any one face the same issue ?
Regards