Leaked Documents: GCHQ Made Port-Scanning Entire Countries a Standard Spy Tool
Since the early days of TCP, port scanning has been used by computer
saboteurs to locate vulnerable systems. In a new set of top secret
documents seen by Heise, it is revealed that in 2009, the British spy
agency GCHQ made port scans a "standard tool" to be applied against entire nations.
Twenty-seven countries are listed as targets of the HACIENDA program in
the presentation, which comes with a promotional offer: readers
desiring to do reconnaissance against another country need simply send
an e-mail.
Also from the article:
The list of targeted services includes ubiquitous public services
such as HTTP and FTP, as well as common administrative protocols such as
SSH (Secure SHell protocol – used for remote access to systems) and
SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol – used for network
administration). Given that in the meantime, port scanning
tools like Zmap have been developed which allow anyone to do
comprehensive scans, it is not the technology used that is shocking, but
rather the gargantuan scale and pervasiveness of the operation.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.