Security Incidents mailing list archives

Re: Attack attempts from 195.86.128.45


From: Fred van Engen <fred.van.engen () xbn nl>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2003 23:34:52 +0200

Hi,

On Tue, May 13, 2003 at 10:12:53AM +0200, Rune Kristian Viken wrote:
This, quite frankly, is blatant abuse of other people's bandwidth.  If I 
read your post correctly, you're scanning _all ports_, 10.000 ports at a 
time.  60 bytes goes to the SYN, 60 bytes to the SYN/ACK, 52 more bytes to 
the ACK.  Then the actual data needed to be sent to determine wheter it is 
a socksproxy, wingate or whatever ... I'll guesstimate at least 100bytes 
more in each direction, plus the FIN/ACK packets, which means another 52 
bytes in each direction.  This means something in the range of 260bytes 
incoming per port.  260 * 10.000 = 260.000 bytes per 'increment' of your 
scan, per IP.


For closed ports, that will be just an incoming SYN and an outgoing RST.
Most ports are closed, so the average amount of data sent will be a SYN
and RST only. That's 60 incoming bytes, or even less if I'm correct.


Now, I used to have a 33k6bps always-on connection, with a /27 IP-range.  
This means your abusive scanning would waste 32*260.000 = 8.3MB for every 

They scan only IP addresses that sent them mail, which is none of your
addresses if you use your ISP's mail server, or just one if you use your
own.


'increment' of your scan.  If I still had that 33k6 connection, I would get 
3.5kb/s incoming ..  amounting to you wasting 40 minutes of my total 
bandwidth for every increment of your self-rightous scanning.


That would be 1*60*10.000 bytes over your 3.5KB dial-up line, which
probably even used data compression and TCP header compression. That is
well below 20 seconds for the 10.000 port scan. And then you're assuming
a connection that is not very likely for people running a mailserver
without smarthost.


This pain is not acceptable.

Your scanning is quite frankly worse than most spammers - for a lot of 
people.  The argument for running blocklist is that spammers waste 
bandwidth.  You waste FAR more bandwidth for a lot of people.  This is a 
thypical example of the 'cure' *killing* the patient instead of helping.


Bandwidth is not the only problem. Annoyed people is another good
argument.


Regards,

Fred.

-- 
Fred van Engen                              XB Networks B.V.
email: fred.van.engen () xbn nl                Televisieweg 2
tel: +31 36 5462400                         1322 AC  Almere
fax: +31 36 5462424                         The Netherlands

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