A question for the list...

From: Dan Hanson (dhansonat_private)
Date: Fri May 16 2003 - 21:27:44 PDT

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    As part of incident handling and response, most of us have had to respond
    to virus infections that have affected networks and hosts. Reports are
    circulating that members of the IRC operator community have distributed
    code through the update mechanism of the Fizzer virus. The code reportedly
    attempts to remove the virus from the host. The latest information seems
    to indicate that the "update" code was removed until further testing can
    be done and more discussion regarding the legalities of this are had.
    
    At last year's Blackhat conference in Las Vegas, Tim Mullen presented what
    turned out to be a very controversial proposal. Briefly, he questioned why
    it would be inappropriate to strike back and disable (if not remove) a
    worm from hosts that are clearly not being adequately managed.
    
    The discussion, both in the session, and after, included those who
    felt that this was simply vigilanteism that has no place in the current
    world, and those who feel that there is a responsibility for someone to do
    something to try to maintain, if not improve, the security situation for
    those connected to the Internet.
    
    http://online.securityfocus.com/columnists/98
    http://www.blackhat.com/html/bh-usa-02/bh-usa-02-speakers.html#Timothy%20Mullen
    http://www.securityfocus.com/columnists/134
    
    It seems to me that a group finally took it upon themselves to do exactly
    what Tim was suggesting the community consider. But it appears that they
    have done it without any consultation of the community in general, and if
    I have read the reports correctly, with no authorization.
    
    Here is a link for a report on News.com and it contains some opinions by
    legal folk.
    http://news.com.com/2100-1002_3-1003894.html?tag=lh
    
    A bunch of ideas for discussion pop-up to me... some of these may not be
    totally on-topic for this forum, if you can tie something back into
    incident response, I'll likely allow it through.
    
    -What are the implications down the road?
    
    -Are there concerns that organizations have with this trend? Legal?
    Precedure?
    
    -Is this any different than a similar activity that installs
    malicious code on the target host?
    
    -The approach that Tim advocated was significantly less intrusive than the
    approach taken with the Fizzer virus, Tim's approach made no significant
    changes on the targeted host, simply blocked the ability of Nimda to
    replicate (if I remember correctly), and notify the owner that they have
    been compromised and where to go to find help in removing the infection.
    The approach taken to actually modify the system to remove Fizzer seems to
    go significantly past that. Why was the reaction to Tim's
    advocacy of discussion so hostile, and to date, I have seen no negative
    criticism of the Fizzer removal.
    
    -Is this a catalyst for a group (IETF?) of some kind to debate these
    issues to find a resolution? I think that most people would agree that the
    increasing risk that these distributed networks pose to every Internet
    connected host is grave, and a better method is required to deal with
    them. Are there other ideas that don't get us into "arms races" with
    malcode writers.
    
    -If this becomes standard practice, will this force the communication and
    update channels underground/encrypted (the "arms race" that I mentioned)
    
    -What are some of the strategies that organizations are implementing to
    control their exposure to these communication channels?
    
    -If a command can be given in a channel to "shut down" the network of
    hosts, what is the view on the legality of doing this? If you had a host
    on your network that was suddenly shut down by a well meaning (or not so
    well meaning third party), what would your response be?
    
    I am not advocating the validity of one side over another, I just find it
    curious how similar the idea of Tim's, and the actual attempt to remove
    the virus, are.
    
    As an aside, I would like to keep the discussion on this civil. If posts
    become to flamey to oneside or the other (i think both sides have valid
    ends) they will likely be rejected.
    
    D
    
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