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Author Topic: "Routers at risk."  (Read 1607 times)
Posh Geordie
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« Reply #1 on: February 17, 2007, 06:10:10 pm »

Good reminder Ian & thanks.

On one occasion I was called to a dead broadband PC setup.  Straight off found most of the OS and software had been wiped so had to do a complete reinstall.

Couldn't get the PC to even talk to the modem router and discovered through some forums that the firmware had also been removed from the router.

Fortunately I was able to obtain the firmware and load it back on, and then made sure that I changed the default username and password, since this was a likely cause as to how the system had been hacked.
I also changed the default 192.163.0.1 / 10.0.0.2 IP address to something less obvious.

It's also worth mentioning the following points for greater security when using wireless networks:

1. Deselect Allow Broadcast of SSID Name.

2. Have at least WEP, and preferably WPA data encryption.

3. Make sure that you make sure that the router can only recognise the MAC addresses from your PC(s). This is set up in the Wireless Station Access List section.
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Dawn Bothwell
ian
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« on: February 17, 2007, 10:22:51 am »

"Routers at risk."
----------------------

              

If your router isn't password protected it might be a good idea to put one on it. This is from CNET News.

Quote:
If you haven't changed the default password on your home router, let this recent threat serve as a reminder.

Attackers could change the configuration of home routers using JavaScript code, security researchers at Indiana University and Symantec have discovered. The researchers first published their work in December, but Symantec publicized the findings on Thursday.

The researchers found that it is possible to change the DNS, or Domain Name System, settings of a router if the owner uses a connected PC to view a Web page with the JavaScript code. This DNS change lets the attacker divert all the Net traffic going through the router. For example, if the victim types in "www.mybank.com," the request could be sent to a similar-looking fake page created to steal sensitive data.

"I have been able to get this to work on Linksys, D-Link and Netgear routers," Symantec researcher Zulfikar Ramzan said. "You can create one Web site that is able to attack all routers. My feeling is that it is just a matter of time before phishers start using this."

After a router's DNS setting is changed, all computers connected to the device will use the DNS server set up by the attacker to find their way on the Internet. DNS functions like the phonebook of the Internet, mapping text-based addresses such as www.news.com to actual numeric Internet Protocol addresses of a Web site.

The attack works on any type of home router, but only if the default router password hasn't been changed, Ramzan said. The malicious JavaScript code embedded on the attacker's Web page logs into the router using the default credentials--often as simple as "admin" and "password"--and changes the settings.

"One of the issues is that the set-up steps in the router don't prompt you to change the password," Ramzan said. As a result, many people never properly configure their networking gear, he said.

In crafting their proof-of-concept attack code, Ramzan and researchers at Indiana University built upon earlier research that showed how JavaScript could be used for malicious purposes. Jeremiah Grossman, chief technology officer at WhiteHat Security, demonstrated how JavaScript let outside attackers target internal corporate networks.

Grossman is impressed by the Symantec and Indiana University work. "This is very dangerous stuff and could be highly effective if used in the wild," he said.

Router makers already know of the problems with default passwords as well as other security concerns, they said. Linksys, for example, recommends that customers change the default password during the installation procedure, said Karen Sohl, a representative for the company, a division of Cisco Systems. "We are aware of this," she said.


On its Web site, Linksys warns users that miscreants are taking advantage of the default passwords. "Hackers know these defaults and will try them to access your wireless device and change your network settings. To thwart any unauthorized changes, customize the device's password so it will be hard to guess," the company states.

Still, although Linksys' software recommends the password change, consumers can either plug in their router without running the installation disk or bypass the change screen, keeping the defaults. The company offers detailed information on how to change the router password on its Web site. Netgear and D-Link also recommend password changes.
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