IDS mailing list archives

RE: Cisco CTR


From: "Rob Shein" <shoten () starpower net>
Date: Thu, 6 Nov 2003 17:55:53 -0500

Yes, but nobody patches it THAT quickly.  CTR acts immediately, not a
half-hour later...it would have started scanning by the time the hacker at
the other end notices that he has a shell...

-----Original Message-----
From: Gary Flynn [mailto:flynngn () jmu edu] 
Sent: Thursday, November 06, 2003 5:58 PM
To: Rob Shein
Cc: 'Liran Chen'; focus-ids () securityfocus com
Subject: Re: Cisco CTR




Rob Shein wrote:

I think this largely relates to the earlier discussion 
about how there 
is a difference between a "false positive" and an actual 
attack that 
fails to succeed.  Ask yourself this: are you going to want to know 
about all attacks or just those that have a chance of success?  If 
someone throws IIS attacks at your apache web server, do 
you want to 
know about it...or do you want to wait until they start using 
apache-compatible exploits?

There's a good summary of what CTR does here: 
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/sw/secursw/ps5054/

Another thing to think about - some folks have a habit of 
patching the hole they came in through. Just because a 
vulnerability scan shows no vulnerability it does not mean an 
attack was unsuccessful.

-- 
Gary Flynn
Security Engineer - Technical Services
James Madison University

Please R.U.N.S.A.F.E.
http://www.jmu.edu/computing/runsafe





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