Honeypots
Addison-Wesley Educational Publishers Inc
978-0-321-10895-1 (ISBN)
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Honeypots are highly sophisticated technologies used to observe and learn about hackers. Practical and commercial interest in these new forms of hacker defense is now hitting the mainstream. There are many successful commercial honeypots, including ManTrap and Specter. Security expert Marcus Ranum notes in his Foreword, "Right now there are about a half-dozen commercial honeypot products on the market. Within a year, I predict there will be dozens. Within two years, there will be a hundred." Spitzner also covers legal issues, one of the most controversial subjects concerning honeypots, receiving extensive guidance from the Department of Justice in writing the legal material. The book, Know Your Enemy was written by a team of authors, and focuses on a special type of honeypot via a research project called The Honeynet Project. This new book is written by the acknowledged honeypot expert and discusses many different types of honeypot technologies. They are perfect companion books. Get a strong foundation with "Honeypots" and explore more details of honeypot deployment with Know Your Enemy.
Lance Spitzner is a senior security architect for Sun Microsystems, Inc., and an acknowledged authority in security and honeypot research. He is a developer, the moderator of the honeypots mailing list, and an instructor for the SANS honeypot course. He is also the founder of the Honeynet Project, a nonprofit group of thirty security professionals dedicated to Honeynet research and learning the tools, tactics, and motives of blackhats and sharing their lessons learned. Lance has presented data on honeypot technologies to organizations such as the Pentagon, the FBI Academy, the Naval War College, the National Security Agency, West Point, SANS, CanSecWest, and Black Hat Briefings. 0321108957AB08282002
Foreword: Giving the Hackers a Kick Where It Hurts.
Preface.
1. The Sting: My Fascination with Honeypots.
The Lure of Honeypots.
How I Got Started with Honeypots.
Perceptions and Misconceptions of Honeypots.
Summary.
References.
2. The Threat: Tools, Tactics, and Motives of Attackers.
Script Kiddies and Advanced Blackhats.
Everyone Is a Target.
Methods of Attackers.
Targets of Opportunity.
Targets of Choice.
Motives of Attackers.
Adapting and Changing Threats.
Summary.
References.
3. History and Definition of Honeypots.
The History of Honeypots.
Early Publications.
Early Products.
Recent History: Honeypots in Action.
Definitions of Honeypots.
How Honeypots Work.
Two Examples of Honeypots.
Types of Honeypots.
Summmary.
References.
4. The Value of Honeypots.
Advantages of Honeypots.
Data Value.
Resources.
Simplicity.
Return on Investment.
Disadvantages of Honeypots.
Narrow Field of View.
Fingerprinting.
Risk.
The Role of Honeypots in Overall Security.
Production Honeypots.
Research Honeypots.
Honeypot Policies.
Summary.
References.
5. Classifying Honeypots by Level of Interaction.
Tradeoffs Between Levels of Interaction.
Low-Interaction Honeypots.
Medium-Interaction Honeypots.
High-Interaction Honeypots.
An Overview of Six Honeypots.
BackOfficer Friendly.
Specter.
Honeyd.
Homemade.
ManTrap.
Honeynets.
Summary.
Reference.
6. BackOfficer Friendly.
Overview of BOF.
The Value of BOF.
How BOF Works.
Installing, Configuring, and Deploying BOF.
Information Gathering and Alerting Capabilities.
Risk Associated with BOF.
Summary.
Tutorial.
Step 1—Installation.
Step 2—Configure.
Step 3—Netstat.
Step 4—Attack System.
Step 5—Review Alerts.
Step 6—Save Alerts.
References.
7. Specter.
Overview of Specter.
The Value of Specter.
How Specter Works.
Installing and Configuring Specter.
Operating System.
Character.
Services.
Intelligence, Traps, Password Types, and Notification.
Additional Options.
Starting the Honeypot.
Deploying and Maintaining Specter.
Information-Gathering and Alerting Capabilities.
Short Mail.
Alert Mail.
Log Analyzer.
Event Log.
Syslog.
Intelligence Gathering.
Risk Associated with Specter.
Summary.
References.
8. Honeyd.
Overview of Honeyd.
Value of Honeyd.
How Honeyd Works.
Blackholing.
ARP Spoofing.
ARP Proxy.
Responding to Attacks.
Installing and Configuring Honeyd.
Deploying and Maintaining Honeyd.
Information Gathering.
Risk Associated with Honeyd.
Summary.
References.
9. Homemade Honeypots.
An Overview of Homemade Honeypots.
Port Monitoring Honeypots.
The Value of Port Monitoring.
How Homemade Port Monitors Work.
Risk Associated with Homemade Port Monitors.
Jailed Environments.
The Value of Jails.
How Jails Work.
Installing and Configuring Jails.
Deploying and Maintaining Jails.
Information Gathering with Jails.
Risk Associated with Jails.
Summary.
References.
10. ManTrap.
Overview of ManTrap.
The Value of ManTrap.
Prevention.
Detection.
Response.
Research.
Nontraditional Applications.
Limitations.
How ManTrap Works.
Adjustments to the Kernel.
How ManTrap Handles the File System.
The Resulting Cages and Their Limitations.
Installing and Configuring ManTrap.
Building the Host System.
iButton and Configuration Options.
Client Administration.
Customizing the Cages.
Deploying and Maintaining ManTrap.
Information Gathering.
Data Capture in Practice: An Example Attack.
Viewing Captured Data
Data Capture at the Application Level.
File Recovery.
Using a Sniffer with ManTrap.
Using iButton for Data Integrity.
Risk Associated with ManTrap.
Summary.
References.
11. Honeynets.
Overview of Honeynets.
The Value of Honeynets.
Methods, Motives, and Evolving Tools.
Trend Analysis.
Incident Response.
Test Beds.
How Honeynets Work.
Controlling Data.
Capturing Data.
Collecting Data.
Honeynet Architectures.
GenI.
GenII.
Virtual Honeynets.
Sweetening the Honeynet.
Deploying and Maintaining Honeynets.
Information Gathering: An Example Attack.
Risk Associated with Honeynets.
Summary.
References.
12. Implementing Your Honeypot.
Specifying Honeypot Goals.
Selecting a Honeypot.
Interaction Level.
Commercial Versus Homemade Solutions.
Platform.
Determining the Number of Honeypots.
Selecting Locations for Deployment.
Placement for Prevention.
Placement for Detection.
Placement for Response
Placement for Research.
Implementing Data Capture.
Maximizing the Amount of Data.
Adding Redundancy to Data Capture.
IP Addresses Versus Resolved Names.
Logging and Managing Data.
Using NAT.
NAT and Private Addressing.
The Role of NAT with Honeypots.
Mitigating Risk.
Mitigating Fingerprinting.
Summary.
References.
13. Maintaining Your Honeypot.
Alert Detection.
Reliability of Alerts.
Critical Content.
Prioritizing Alerts.
Archiving.
Response.
Determining Reaction Practices and Roles.
Documenting Reaction Practices.
Remote Access and Data Control.
Data Analysis.
A Simple Scenario: Low-Interaction Honeypots.
A Complex Scenario: High-Interaction Honeypots.
Updates.
Summary.
References.
14. Putting It All Together.
Honeyp.com.
Matching Goals to Honeypot Solutions.
Deploying the Honeypots.
Maintaining the Honeypots.
Surviving and Responding to an Attack.
Honeyp.edu.
Matching Goals to Honeypot Solutions.
Deploying the Honeynet.
Maintaining the Honeynet.
Analyzing Attacks.
Summary.
References.
15. Legal Issues.
Are Honeypots Illegal?
Precedents.
Privacy.
The Fourth Amendment.
Stored Information: The Electronic Communications Privacy Act.
Real-Time Interception of Information: The Wiretap Act and the Pen/Trap Statute.
Entrapment.
Liability.
Summary.
References.
Resourcess.
16. Future of Honeypots.
From Misunderstanding to Acceptance.
Improving Ease of Use.
Easier Administration.
Prepackaged Solutions.
Closer Integration with Technologies.
Targeting Honeypots for Specific Purposes.
Expanding Research Applications.
Early Warning and Prediction.
Studying Advanced Attackers.
Identifying New Threats.
Deploying in Distributed Environments.
A Final Caveat.
Summary.
References.
Appendix A. BackOfficer Friendly ASCII File of Scans.
Appendix B. Snort Configuration File.
Appendix C. IP Protocols.
Appendix D. Definitions, Requirements, and Standards Document.
Appendix E. Honeynet Logs.
Index. 0321108957T09172002
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 15.10.2002 |
---|---|
Verlagsort | New Jersey |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 100 x 100 mm |
Gewicht | 100 g |
Themenwelt | Informatik ► Netzwerke ► Sicherheit / Firewall |
Informatik ► Theorie / Studium ► Kryptologie | |
ISBN-10 | 0-321-10895-7 / 0321108957 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-321-10895-1 / 9780321108951 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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