Snort mailing list archives
Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected?
From: Bill Bernsen <bill.bernsen () nyu edu>
Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2014 10:20:23 -0400
Hi Teo, I appreciate the enthusiasm for intrusion detection but your constant emails are becoming a burden on my inbox. Nearly everyone running Snort in the last week has been seeing Heartbleed attacks, we don't need to be updated every time you're probed. Cheers, Bill On Wed, Apr 16, 2014 at 9:52 AM, Teo En Ming <teo.en.ming () gmail com> wrote:
Further probes by hackers against my HTTPS, POP3S and IMAPS ports for the OpenSSL heartbleed vulnerability. Here are the snort alerts: 04/16-05:04:15.741415 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.244.37:58553 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/16-05:04:15.986131 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.244.37:58553 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/16-06:02:24.878593 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.243.189:57351 -> 192.168.1.147:995 04/16-06:02:25.101482 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.243.189:57351 -> 192.168.1.147:995 04/16-06:27:33.667818 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.198.178:30647 -> 192.168.1.146:443 04/16-06:27:33.937606 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.198.178:30647 -> 192.168.1.146:443 04/16-08:11:18.960286 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.195.19:45514 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/16-08:11:19.227768 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.195.19:45514 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/16-08:30:13.406971 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 182.118.48.188:49662 -> 192.168.1.147:995 04/16-08:30:13.576376 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 182.118.48.188:49662 -> 192.168.1.147:995 Teo En Ming On Wed, Apr 16, 2014 at 1:16 AM, Sandeep Singh <ctrlaltdelngone () gmail com>wrote:The kind of traffic you are observing will continue to be there for a while. If you have your servers patched then the best thing would be to identify the IP ranges that are making noise and block them on your Firewall as I have seen these IP ranges generating inbound traffic towards several other networks as well. Thanks On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 9:26 PM, Joel Esler (jesler) <jesler () cisco com>wrote:yes, and it will continue for a long time. On Apr 15, 2014, at 11:06 AM, Teo En Ming <teo.en.ming () gmail com> wrote: Hackers continue to probe my HTTPS, POP3S, and IMAPS ports for the heartbleed vulnerability after I have patched openssl in CentOS 6.5 and RHEL 7 Beta. Here are the Snort alerts:04/15-05:04:23.266586 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.243.188:52169 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/15-05:04:23.510253 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.243.188:52169 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/15-06:02:28.430789 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.243.189:58534 -> 192.168.1.147:995 04/15-06:02:28.652725 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.243.189:58534 -> 192.168.1.147:995 04/15-07:05:21.194097 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 101.226.17.243:36498 -> 192.168.1.146:443 04/15-07:05:21.452853 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 101.226.17.243:36498 -> 192.168.1.146:443 04/15-08:38:08.402528 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.198.208:24518 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/15-08:38:08.647470 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.198.208:24518 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/15-08:48:29.737142 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.195.140:29860 -> 192.168.1.147:995 04/15-08:48:29.961892 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.195.140:29860 -> 192.168.1.147:995 Regards, Teo En Ming <http://seclists.org/nmap-dev/2014/q2/83> On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 3:10 AM, Teo En Ming <teo.en.ming () gmail com>wrote:I have patched openssl on RHEL 7 Beta and rebooted. Teo En Ming On Tue, Apr 15, 2014 at 12:03 AM, Teo En Ming <teo.en.ming () gmail com>wrote:I think downloading OpenSSL 1.0.1g, compiling and installing it will break OpenSSH. I prefer to install by RPM. Regards, Teo En Ming On Mon, Apr 14, 2014 at 11:45 PM, Nicholas Mavis (nmavis) < nmavis () cisco com> wrote:You can download OpenSSL 1.0.1g and compile it. Nick From: Teo En Ming <teo.en.ming () gmail com> Date: Monday, April 14, 2014 at 11:40 AM To: nmavis <nmavis () cisco com> Cc: Snort Users <snort-users () lists sourceforge net>, Teo En Ming < teo.en.ming () gmail com> Subject: Re: [Snort-users] Suspicious hacker activity detected? Dear Nicholas Mavis, I have patched openssl on Centos 6.5 x86_64. However, I cannot patch openssl on my RHEL 7 Beta because I don't have a Red Hat Network subscription. What do you think can be done? Thank you. Regards, Teo En Ming On Mon, Apr 14, 2014 at 11:13 PM, Nicholas Mavis (nmavis) < nmavis () cisco com> wrote:Yes, this is a sign and it also looks like you are vulnerable. Nick From: Teo En Ming <teo.en.ming () gmail com> Date: Monday, April 14, 2014 at 11:06 AM To: Snort Users <snort-users () lists sourceforge net> Subject: [Snort-users] Suspicious hacker activity detected? Hi, My HTTPS web server, POP3S and IMAPS ports were probed for the OpenSSL heartbleed vulnerability without my knowledge and authorization. Is it a sign of hacker activity? Please look at the Snort alerts below. [root@localhost snort]# grep heartbeat snort.fast | grep -v 161.69.31.4 04/14-04:34:45.168194 [**] [1:30516:6] SERVER-OTHER TLSv1.1 large heartbeat response - possible ssl heartbleed attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 192.168.1.146:443-> 185.35.61.19:41201 04/14-09:31:58.763823 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.243.189:46524 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/14-09:31:58.764609 [**] [1:30516:6] SERVER-OTHER TLSv1.1 large heartbeat response - possible ssl heartbleed attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 192.168.1.147:993-> 183.60.243.189:46524 04/14-09:31:59.025988 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.243.189:46524 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/14-09:36:47.578766 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.244.46:55346 -> 192.168.1.147:995 04/14-09:36:47.579841 [**] [1:30516:6] SERVER-OTHER TLSv1.1 large heartbeat response - possible ssl heartbleed attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 192.168.1.147:995-> 183.60.244.46:55346 04/14-09:36:47.775693 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.244.46:55346 -> 192.168.1.147:995 04/14-09:36:47.775693 [**] [1:30512:5] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 183.60.244.46:55346 -> 192.168.1.147:995 04/14-10:13:25.031989 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 101.226.19.76:31223 -> 192.168.1.146:443 04/14-10:13:25.032841 [**] [1:30516:6] SERVER-OTHER TLSv1.1 large heartbeat response - possible ssl heartbleed attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 192.168.1.146:443-> 101.226.19.76:31223 04/14-10:13:25.262897 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 101.226.19.76:31223 -> 192.168.1.146:443 04/14-10:13:25.262897 [**] [1:30512:5] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 101.226.19.76:31223 -> 192.168.1.146:443 04/14-11:51:26.034725 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.198.190:25521 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/14-11:51:26.035167 [**] [1:30516:6] SERVER-OTHER TLSv1.1 large heartbeat response - possible ssl heartbleed attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 192.168.1.147:993-> 180.153.198.190:25521 04/14-11:51:26.232356 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.198.190:25521 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/14-11:51:26.232356 [**] [1:30512:5] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.198.190:25521 -> 192.168.1.147:993 04/14-12:01:46.374268 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.198.219:50214 -> 192.168.1.147:995 04/14-12:01:46.375062 [**] [1:30516:6] SERVER-OTHER TLSv1.1 large heartbeat response - possible ssl heartbleed attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 192.168.1.147:995-> 180.153.198.219:50214 04/14-12:01:46.597640 [**] [1:30524:1] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.198.219:50214 -> 192.168.1.147:995 04/14-12:01:46.597640 [**] [1:30512:5] SERVER-OTHER OpenSSL TLSv1.1 heartbeat read overrun attempt [**] [Classification: Attempted Information Leak] [Priority: 2] {TCP} 180.153.198.219:50214 -> 192.168.1.147:995 Yours sincerely, Teo En Ming------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Learn Graph Databases - Download FREE O'Reilly Book "Graph Databases" is the definitive new guide to graph databases and their applications. Written by three acclaimed leaders in the field, this first edition is now available. Download your free book today! http://p.sf.net/sfu/NeoTech_______________________________________________ Snort-users mailing list Snort-users () lists sourceforge net Go to this URL to change user options or unsubscribe: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/snort-users Snort-users list archive: http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum_name=snort-users Please visit http://blog.snort.org to stay current on all the latest Snort news! ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Learn Graph Databases - Download FREE O'Reilly Book "Graph Databases" is the definitive new guide to graph databases and their applications. Written by three acclaimed leaders in the field, this first edition is now available. Download your free book today! http://p.sf.net/sfu/NeoTech _______________________________________________ Snort-users mailing list Snort-users () lists sourceforge net Go to this URL to change user options or unsubscribe: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/snort-users Snort-users list archive: http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum_name=snort-users Please visit http://blog.snort.org to stay current on all the latest Snort news!------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Learn Graph Databases - Download FREE O'Reilly Book "Graph Databases" is the definitive new guide to graph databases and their applications. Written by three acclaimed leaders in the field, this first edition is now available. Download your free book today! http://p.sf.net/sfu/NeoTech _______________________________________________ Snort-users mailing list Snort-users () lists sourceforge net Go to this URL to change user options or unsubscribe: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/snort-users Snort-users list archive: http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum_name=snort-users Please visit http://blog.snort.org to stay current on all the latest Snort news!
-- Bill Bernsen Network Security Analyst ITS Technology Security Services, New York University http://www.nyu.edu/its/security
------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Learn Graph Databases - Download FREE O'Reilly Book "Graph Databases" is the definitive new guide to graph databases and their applications. Written by three acclaimed leaders in the field, this first edition is now available. Download your free book today! http://p.sf.net/sfu/NeoTech
_______________________________________________ Snort-users mailing list Snort-users () lists sourceforge net Go to this URL to change user options or unsubscribe: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/snort-users Snort-users list archive: http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?forum_name=snort-users Please visit http://blog.snort.org to stay current on all the latest Snort news!
Current thread:
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected?, (continued)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Michael Brown (Apr 14)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Teo En Ming (Apr 14)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Nicholas Mavis (nmavis) (Apr 14)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Teo En Ming (Apr 14)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Arvid Van Essche (Apr 14)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Teo En Ming (Apr 14)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Teo En Ming (Apr 15)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Joel Esler (jesler) (Apr 15)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Sandeep Singh (Apr 15)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Teo En Ming (Apr 16)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Bill Bernsen (Apr 16)
- Re: Suspicious hacker activity detected? Joel Esler (jesler) (Apr 14)