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| General IT Discussion Non BT Related Topics |
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Hi everyone,
I have Tiscali broadband and have had it for a few months now. I work in a school as an IT technician so I have access to the server and all PCs there. One of the things we have is Cisco VPN so teachers can take their laptops home, connect securely through the Internet back into the school network. The other day, someone used a VPN, got onto a server and started maliciously deleting accounts. The security team became involved and it has been traced back to MY home broadband. How can this be? Is it possible someone has used my broadband username and password and logged into their router as me from another property and it's linked the IP address as belonging to me? Could someone have VPN'd in from somewhere else and somehow spoofed my IP address? My wireless has wep encryption - not strong, I know but they would still have needed the VPN client, no? I found that my router had remote access enabled so could someone have come in from outside, accessed my PC and VPN'd in from there? Whoever's done it has hacked the servers at the school and it's all pointing back to my IP address ! I am in big trouble right now. Please Help ! |
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I cannot believe that you're using WEP on your wireless. The policy here is that any machine that is going to be taken home and used on a wireless network there must be running WPA2 AES encryption. For you to be using WEP is just plain stupid. If the user here cannot support the minimum requirement then they must use LAN and not Wifi.
Security is done through layers, and your first layer was effectively a broken screen door.
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A 3rd Party Security Audit is the IT equivalent of a Colonoscopy, it's long, intrusive, and when it's done you'll have seen a lot of things you really didn't want to see, and you'd definitely remember that you had it done. I ♣ baby harp seals. |
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Some more advice:
- don't save your VPN password in the Cisco utility - don't use WEP( Streaker69 is right) Also, for someone to start deleting accounts, he must have known a lot about that network. Where the servers are(IPs,etc), the admin password, network security, etc. Well, maybe he did it from a different IP ( studying the network) and then logged in as you, when he did the damage. I'd say it's possible. You are the weakest link, you should not have VPN rights anymore. Now, there is a question in my mind: why you? It could have been anyone. Also, for your job title, you should not have administrator rights, it's too much! Blame it on the network admin, for being gullible or not working with security in mind and giving you too much server access. Don't want to be mean to you, but somewhere it those words, you will see a grain of truth.Someone, somehow got your passwords(broadband, VPN, domain admin, remote management). That's a lot of work, for one purpose, to just delete some accounts. I'd make sure to "own" and maintain network access. They can't do this in one day, or one night, unless general security on that network suuuucks! So, your network was targeted!I'd change all the passwords at this point to something way more secure, and start thinking like the criminal. You do want to keep your job, right! Pentesting, some paranoia, work together with the security team to find out how; you might learn something about yourself and security. It's a start. Showing that you are willing to find out how it happened, will show them that you are probably innocent and not knowledgeable enough to do something like that. Alright, that is all! Let me know what the result is. I am curious now!
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"Hacking is the Art of Attempting everything, until something finally works!" "The possession of anything, begins in the mind! " |
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Or the attackers modified the logs that the security guys are using as evidence of your guilt. This kind of attack seems very much like the work of a teenage computer vandal to me, or of someone deliberately trying to set you up, or of someone trying to cover up a mistake by pointing blame in your direction. A serious attacker would have not done something so attention getting as deleting accounts unless they needed to do it to cover up something else - most likely they would have gone in, got what they were after and left with no one being the wiser. Or there is some other explanation. Not that much we can do to help you. Get a good lawyer. Have your PC examined for signs of intrusion.
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Nancy Astor: If I were your wife I would put poison in your coffee! Winston Churchill: Madam, if I were your husband I would drink it. |
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Thanks you two for replying.
I guess security is pretty poor generally. The laptops the teachers use have Cisco VPN client installed. All the teacher does is open the client, click connect, enter their username and password,a couple of clicks and they are connected. I am suspended and all I've been told is that an admin account has been used to VPN in and it's been traced back to my IP address. I don't know when or how many times this has happened. From time to time, in the past, I've bought some of these laptops home myself, usually to work on them and they've had broken AVs and several trojans. Foolishly, I've left them on and connected by an ethernet cable, sometimes over the weekend. I think, if I was me, I'd sack me for being so negligent. Would the MAC address of the machine that VPN'd in be listed in their logs somewhere - because if it's a MAC address that doesn't belong to any of these machines then that's maybe a start? Quote:
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I'm not sure which laptop has been targeted because they come and go, most have been re-imaged. Would their logs tell them the machine's MAC address or would it only be the MAC address of my router. You see, I'm not being given much to go on as I'm the number 1 suspect right now. Last edited by Fancy; 10-01-2009 at 08:00 PM. |
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NO! No MAC address at all will show up in their logs. Just if you had a layer 2 connection, but here it is not the case. I'm sure they only have the IP address. As lupin suggested, the best you can do is get a good lawyer and have your PC examined for signs of intrusion.
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"Si tacuisses, philosophus mansisses" |
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The best practice for such machines would be to pull the drive, write an image of it using Ghost, and reinstall the machine fresh. Then using Ghost Explorer pull any data out of the image and restore it back to the machine. Today's trojans and such are nothing to be fooled around with on a production network, once it is suspected a machine has been compromised it should be quarantined and not put back onto the network until it has been verified clean.
__________________
A 3rd Party Security Audit is the IT equivalent of a Colonoscopy, it's long, intrusive, and when it's done you'll have seen a lot of things you really didn't want to see, and you'd definitely remember that you had it done. I ♣ baby harp seals. |
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How does an ISP give out the owner of an IP address? Does that mean they have involved the police? I'm half expecting them at my door any day now.
Like I said, any evidence is back in the school right now. The PC I'm using now is clean and I have turned wifi off. There's nothing to find here - I don't know if that's good or bad. My head's in a spin. I feel physically sick. |
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If you have something to hide, then call a lawyer. |
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