hi joe On 12/08/15 at 01:24am, Joe Morgan wrote:
We received a similar ransom e-mail yesterday
:-) dont pay real $$$ ... pretend that it was paid and watch for them to come get the ransom ... never give your real banking info ask them, where do you send the "$xx,000" mastercard gift card by fedex/ups/dhl ... law enforcement might get lucky with real physical addresses ... once in a while, there are dumb criminals that show up on tv news
followed by a UDP flood attack.
*pout* or not ... their demo shows they've got the zombie botnet capable of sending 20+Gbps .... law enforcement and ISP security dept "should be interested" to trace them down ... but it takes tons of (their) resources to take the next steps: who is it and where are the attackers *pout* ... udp ddos floods are "expensive" to solve ... unfortunately, you cannot mitigate any incoming UDP-ddos attacks at your server/router.... udp mitigation has to be done by" - somehow, you need to find out who they are etc and legally seize their botnet - your upstream ISP/peer whom doesn't send it to you - or you setup and 2nd pipe at a geographically different colo ( cheaper ) - or you first send your udp traffic thru a ( expensive ) ddos scrubber the idea of "limit" the udp traffic is basically useless, since udp packets already came down the wire ... you should at least not reply to any udp ddos packet - don't send "host not available", etc etc
Here is a sample of the attack traffic we received as well as a copy of the ransom e-mail. Thought this might be useful to others who have been targeted as well. I will have to talk with our upstream providers to get a definitive on the size of the attacks. At the point in time we blackholed our ip we were seeing 20+Gbps.
*Dec/07/2015 5:40:22PM *Here is a summary of the flows to our web server IP during the ddos event:
since it is a webserver they're playing with ... there's "dozen" things you can do to mitigate the UDP flood attacks - web server should only be running apache ... remove ntpd, bind, etc, etc, etc aka, remove the risks of udp amplification - make sure required things like ntpd/sshd etc are using local non-routable ip# - long common sense list of stuff to do ... including the 4 points listed above everybody would want the timezone so they can check their "bandwidth" monitor to see if 20Gbps hurts them too
Top 10 flows by packets per pecond for dst IP: 96.43.134.147 Duration Proto Src IP Addr Src Pt Dst Pt Packets pps bps 0.001 UDP 175.43.224.99 1900 22456 2048 2.0 M 5.8 G 0.002 UDP 120.199.113.49 1900 54177 2048 1.0 M 2.8 G 0.002 UDP 27.208.164.227 1900 54177 2048 1.0 M 2.7 G
what app do yu have that talks to port 1900 ? these are probably spoof'd src address .... but you will never know until you look up these ip# to see if there is any common link to it like it all belonging to the same zombie net for all ListofZombiehosts do - whois 175.43.224.99 - traceroute 175.43.224.99 done - udp is primarily used for ntp, dns, nfs, x11, snmp, etc if the service is not used, turn off the ntp/bind/nfsd/X11/snmpd daemons
Top 10 flows by flows per second for dst IP: 96.43.134.147 Duration Proto Src IP Addr Src Pt Dst Pt Packets pps bps 248.847 UDP 41.214.2.249 123 47207 8.6 M 34594 133.4 M 248.886 UDP 91.208.136.126 123 63775 6.7 M 26813 103.4 M 150.893 UDP 85.118.98.253 123 47207 5.1 M 33843 130.5 M
they like to play with ntpd ... make sure your NTPd sw is patched
Top 10 flows by bits per second for dst IP: 96.43.134.147 Duration Proto Src IP Addr Src Pt Dst Pt Packets pps bps 0.002 UDP 92.241.8.75 53 5575 2048 1.0 M 12.4 G 0.003 UDP 190.184.144.74 53 18340 2048 682666 8.3 G 0.003 UDP 190.109.218.69 53 63492 2048 682666 8.3 G
they like to play with DNS ... make sure your bind sw is patched and properly configured ( not open resolver, etc )
================================================
Copy of the e-mail headers:
Delivered-To: joe@joesdatacenter.com Received: by 10.79.27.84 with SMTP id b81csp1190623ivb; Mon, 7 Dec 2015 15:32:22 -0800 (PST)
i assume this ip# is your own local lan ?
X-Received: by 10.25.88.208 with SMTP id m199mr28948lfb.157.1449531142088; Mon, 07 Dec 2015 15:32:22 -0800 (PST) Return-Path: <armada.collective@bk.ru>
something tangible to trace/monitor good luck trying to get bk.ru and their ISP to help resolve the ransom issue traceroute bk.ru traceroute mail.ru traceroute 217.69.141.11 traceroute 95.191.131.93 whois 217.69.141.11 whois 95.191.131.93 politely rattle the security cages of the NOC for each of the ISPs that is listed in traceroute and especially the IP# owner
Received: from f369.i.mail.ru (f369.i.mail.ru. [217.69.141.11]) by mx.google.com with ESMTPS id 7si214394lfk.103.2015.12.07.15.32.21 for <joe@joesdatacenter.com> ...
Received: from [95.191.131.93] (ident=mail) by f369.i.mail.ru with local (envelope-from <armada.collective@bk.ru>) .... Received: from [95.191.131.93] by e.mail.ru with HTTP; Tue, 08 Dec 2015 02:32:21 +0300 From: =?UTF-8?B?QXJtYWRhIENvbGxlY3RpdmU=?= <armada.collective@bk.ru> ....
X-Mailer: Mail.Ru Mailer 1.0
looks like they are using webmail ??
X-Originating-IP: [95.191.131.93]
mail.ru knows exactly who is/was using their ip# 95.191.131.93 at 02:32:21 +0300
Date: Tue, 08 Dec 2015 02:32:21 +0300 Reply-To: =?UTF-8?B?QXJtYWRhIENvbGxlY3RpdmU=?= <armada.collective@bk.ru>
...
If you haven heard for us, use Google. Recently, we have launched some of the largest DDoS attacks in history. Check this out, for example: https://twitter.com/optucker/status/665470164411023360 (and it was measured while we were DDoS-ing 3 other sites at the same time) And this: https://twitter.com/optucker/status/666501788607098880
We will start DDoS-ing your network if you don't pay 20 Bitcoins @ 19zErvraWpnLj4Ga7nsLXh8C52g1zogYJe by Wednesday.
orders of magnitude cheaper than tracking down who it is that sent the email and chasing down their botnet everybody in the world, should not be using any of the products/services whom also support bitcoin or any other anonymous payment methods
Right now we will start small 30 minutes UDP attack on your site IP: 96.43.134.147 It will not be hard, just to prove that we are for real Armada Collective.
tough group .... the FBI, interpol and especially the russian law enforcement group should be interested to get hold of them ... it will be expensive in time to track them down while they collect enough $$$ from lots of folks that dont want to deal with the primary issue of ransoms
If you don't pay by Wednesday, massive attack will start, price to stop will increase to 40 BTC and will go up 2 BTC for every hour of attack and attack will last for as long as you don't pay.
In addition, we will be contacting affected customers to explain why they are down and recommend them to move to OVH. We will do the same on social networks.
:-)
Our attacks are extremely powerful - peaks over 1 Tbps per second.
that should be big enough of an issues that all ISPs between them and you would want to stop it too it's gonna be expensive in time and staff to play cat-n-mouse with them
Do not reply, we will not read. Pay and we will know its you. AND YOU WILL NEVER AGAIN HEAR FROM US!
:-) magic pixie dust alvin # DDoS-Mitigator.net