Why Laws Won't Save Banks From DDoS Attacks 80
kierny writes "Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.) should know better. The chairman of the House Intelligence Committee claimed to told NBC News that the Operation Ababil U.S. bank disruption DDoS campaign could be stopped, if only private businesses had unfettered access to top-flight U.S. government threat intelligence. Not coincidentally, Rogers is the author of CISPA (now v2.0), a bill that would provide legal immunity for businesses that share threat data with the government, while allowing intelligence agencies to use it for 'national security' purposes, thus raising the ire of privacy rights groups. Just one problem: Numerous security experts have rubbished Rogers' assertion that threat intelligence would have any effect on banks' ability to defend themselves. The bank disruptions aren't cutting-edge or stealthy. They're just about packets overwhelming targeted sites, despite what Congressionally delivered intelligence might suggest."
Locks keep out honest people... (Score:5, Insightful)
These folks obsessed with a "negative peace" by making more laws should study history.
Re:Locks keep out honest people... (Score:5, Insightful)
They feel like they must do something and do it right now. It's more important to appear to be doing something to fix the problem than to actually fix the problem.
Re:Locks keep out honest people... (Score:4, Insightful)
Passing laws makes the powerless feel better. You've never heard "There oughta be a law"? What they really should be saying is "There oughta be trained people who know how to track down the criminals and convictions which show the laws already on the books are enforced."
Good luck enforcing laws overseas.
Re: (Score:2)
All the bad things will go away if they can just take away free will.
Re: (Score:1)
This is NOT about helping businesses from being DDos'ed, or hacked, or anything else.
This is about having businesses be able to legally give lots of juicy customer information to the gov't, preferably under the threat of tax audits of all the executives of said business instead of having to pay for the data like everybody else.
Re: (Score:1)
They feel like they must do something and do it right now. It's more important to appear to be doing something to fix the problem than to actually fix the problem.
Too bad there is no possible way for them to actually figure out who is responsible for a DDOS attack, because the headers are spoofed. Also, why the fuck does DNS run on UDP?
Re: (Score:2)
Too bad there is no possible way for them to actually figure out who is responsible for a DDOS attack, because the headers are spoofed.
Actually it's often easy because it's only Anonymous and similar that does DDoS for purely political reasons. Most DDoS are cybercriminals extorting money in some way or disgruntled customers seeking revenge, and both can be identified outside the attack itself using regular investigative methods.
Also, why the fuck does DNS run on UDP?
Legacy. It also runs on TCP now but started out UDP only.
Re: (Score:1)
Actually it's often easy because it's only Anonymous and similar that does DDoS for purely political reasons. Most DDoS are cybercriminals extorting money in some way or disgruntled customers seeking revenge, and both can be identified outside the attack itself using regular investigative methods.
That certainly is the only way to find the source of DOS attacks now. In cases where the malefactor does not attempt extortion, or otherwise brag about their attack, this path of inquiry is impossible. Even when they do find this person, the sticky bit of proving guilt beyond reasonable doubt (remember the court of law) remains tenuous at best. Even if every router on the path of our spoofed packets kept exceptionally (unreasonably) detailed logs, the peer-to-peer nature of IP would require a subpoena fo
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
DDOS wouldn't be possible without a botnet, perhaps preventing the latter will prevent the former. Anti-virus, better session awareness from the OS, and good networking practices can all go a long way here.
Re: (Score:1)
These folks obsessed with a "negative peace" by making more laws should study history.
They already have.. Those who die with the most marbles win.
Re: (Score:2)
They already have.. Those who die with the most marbles win.
Those who die with the most marbles are still dead. FTFY
Re: (Score:1)
When DOS is outlawed, only outlaws will have C:\
oh wait, this is about DDOS?
never mind
Re: (Score:2)
So today, in class, you guys 'n gals studied 'positive peace' and
'negative peace'?
Sigh -- if your only tool is a hammer etc.
Re: (Score:2)
In a positive peace, some
Re: (Score:1)
"I'm sorry, but there is a 5 day waiting period before you can steal that. We have to run a background check on you. Sorry, government regulations."
Re: (Score:2)
NO
Re: (Score:3)
NO
There actually is, but the main body of Congress routinely ignores it because the seat of their collective pants tell them to.
Representatives like Rogers like to get laws on the books with their names bandied about them, to show that they're not just fooling around, then they can get back to the business of whatever their big campaign donors want them to do. Circus and bread.
Re: (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Not a bad comment until the last two words. He simply pointed out the inherent weakness of an all electronic banking system. Yes it's inevitable, just like crass comments from anonymous cowards seem to be inevitable.
Re:And laws helped cause it (Score:5, Insightful)
The end result of all these wars is that individual liberty is collateral damage. The war on Drugs, on Terror, on Child Porn, etc., means that innocent people pay the price while the thing they war against never goes away. One unwinable war after another.
Re: (Score:2)
That was the point. You didn't thing this all happened by accident, did you?
Re: (Score:2)
There simply is not enough cash for this to ever be an option. It does not matter what laws they enact, when only 2% of all US money is actually backed by physical currency you can never have a vibrant physical cash economy.
Let's focus on the important part (Score:5, Funny)
... I don't think 'rubbished' is a legitimate word.
Re: (Score:2)
ask a brit.......
Re: (Score:2)
Sue Microsoft for willful negligence (Score:2)
What's needed is a big lawsuit by a big bank against Microsoft for willful negligence. (Def: Intentional performance of an unreasonable act in disregard of a known risk, making it highly probable that harm will be caused.") Knowingly distributing operating systems which are known to be remotely exploitable to attack other systems fits that definition.
Microsoft's EULA doesn't protect them here. The victim is a third party, not their own customer, and not a signatory to the EULA. Nor does this require a c
Re: (Score:3)
What the hell are you going on about? Odds are the DDoS is taking down the target network before a single packet reaches anything running Microsoft software. Actually, the reason it's a DDoS is because packets aren't reaching anything running Microsoft software (clients and servers). You'd be making a tiny bit of sense if you said Cisco, but that would be like suing the New York City because the roads can't accommodate every single person in the country visiting NYC at once.
Re:Sue Microsoft for willful negligence (Score:4, Interesting)
I think he's talking about all those windows peecee's slaved into botnets because of their defective by design OS and are used in DDos attacks such as this. It all starts with malware ya know and Windows is the most pervasive form of malware on the planet.
Re: (Score:1)
Not that the idea of a lawsuit against Microsoft is likely, but I think the OP is referring to the source of the attack - not the target. The point is that many DDOS attacks are created by zombie computers, many of which run Microsoft operating systems.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Depends. Is your car designed in such a way that makes it unusually easy to steal?
Re: (Score:2)
Because no deterrent is strong enough. (Score:2)
No matter how justified that deterrent is made (by creating it as a law). To stop the most determined people from doing what they will do.
Should banks be protected from attack? I would say in a perfect world were banks were innocent and served a purpose other then gambling on your own investment into them. Maybe.
But as it stands now, banks should be left out in the cold to defend themselves, and in ways that don't violate our laws. They need no more special justifications placed in our society for them.
Re: (Score:2)
No matter how justified that deterrent is made (by creating it as a law). To stop the most determined people from doing what they will do.
Should banks be protected from attack? I would say in a perfect world were banks were innocent and served a purpose other then gambling on your own investment into them. Maybe.
But as it stands now, banks should be left out in the cold to defend themselves, and in ways that don't violate our laws. They need no more special justifications placed in our society for them.
What are you talking about? Murder is illegal. I haven't been murdered! Therefore the law is working!
Re: (Score:2)
Then why do we need to deliberate on new rules in this regard? What is so special about banks that we need to codify how they go about this? Is this new rule going to give them special permission to violate computer systems to collect this data?
Whats the catch22... or the article is just B.S.
Re: (Score:2)
Yet people get murdered every day. It's a shame. But the deterrent for murder applies generally equally to all, or at least thats the principle. Technically grandmothers have no more deterrent applied to them then 30 year old single males.
Re: (Score:2)
Also the reason you have not been murdered yet probably has more to do with your general niceness, averageness, location (not in a slum) etc.. but I know nothing about you to make such assumptions, the law has a lower bearing then many factors on whether you get murdered or not =P
Re: (Score:2)
Also the reason you have not been murdered yet probably has more to do with your general niceness, averageness, location (not in a slum) etc.. but I know nothing about you to make such assumptions, the law has a lower bearing then many factors on whether you get murdered or not =P
Hah. I was just being facetious when I made that comment. But I do try to be courteous.
Re: (Score:2)
I thought as much ;p You are a gentleman and a comedian!
Re: (Score:2)
No matter how justified that deterrent is made (by creating it as a law). To stop the most determined people from doing what they will do.
The title is misleading because it implies that the law is intended to be a deterrent, but the summary makes it clear that the law being talked about deals with allowing the sharing of information about the attacks. So, it's not another law making DDoS illegal, it's a law allowing information about DDoS to be passed around.
Yes, another deterrent law would be useless. A law that allows those who are being attacked to share data about how they are being attacked is not.
But as it stands now, banks should be left out in the cold to defend themselves, and in ways that don't violate our laws.
Some of those banks have my money in
Re: (Score:2)
Thanks for the clarification of the title, How come thats not legal already. AFAIK know and after working in the IT industry and with software like SNORT publishing blacklists with comments like "spammer, ddosser" is perfectly legal for anyone.
As far as your right to want the money you invested in your great gambling casinos of the new world order, great for you, I have a differing opinion, and I doubt we'll ever see eye to eye on that. I never believed banks were for security when I was a kid, and after wa
Re: (Score:2)
I guess the better question then is. Should banks have more priorty with law enforcement hunting DDOSers then netflix. Or a single youtuber?
In my opinion all 3 parties should have the same priority. The best argument you could make for changing that priority is severity of attack as in how damaging it is to how many parties. In this case your argument for special protection rings true, but it should also ring true if those DDOSers are targeting something other then a bank. So the fact that it is a bank by i
Therein lies the rub ... (Score:4, Informative)
These people want this information shared for their own purposes.
This has nothing at all to do with protecting banks from DDoS -- it's about ensuring government access to all of our data. If they can get private industry to hand them data they can't collect on their own then they can circumvent other laws.
I agree with the assessment that no law is going to make this kind of attack hitting from all over the world (and probably on zombie computers) go away.
These people just want the total surveillance world that scares the rest of us.
If not intel... (Score:2)
If terrorist surveillance information isn't enough, then the banks will have only one logical next step: operate their own armed aerial drones.
Laws (Score:1)
Laws without respect and/or a gun won't protect you from anything.
It goes without saying, but I'll say it anyway, Many laws, like CISPA, RICO, etc., deserve no respect, and sometimes it takes a gun to remove them from the books, or to keep them from being put there in the first place when majority rule fails.
I'm So Embarassed (Score:2)
Improve infrastructure, don't inact laws to prolif (Score:2)
Re: Improve infrastructure, don't inact laws to pr (Score:1)
Re: Improve infrastructure, don't inact laws to p (Score:1)
"Congressionally delivered intelligence"? (Score:2)
Typical politispeak (Score:2)
This is coming from the guy that boasted on Twitter how much money he received from lobbyists that support CISPA... A truly devoted corporate **ahem** civil servant. It's no surprise that 2 out of 3 people would rather have a colonoscopy than the current congress.
http://boingboing.net/2013/03/23/congressman-boasts-on-twitter.html [boingboing.net]