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| Subject: | [Snort-sigs] About the connection in the alert of BackDoor |
|---|---|
| Date: | Mon, 07 Jan 2008 14:08:20 +0800 |
Hi all,
Happy new year!
I'm analysing the role of the participants in an alert. I found there is some difficult in analysing the alerts in class of BACKDOOR. There are commonly a word 'connection' in the alert names, but it may means the attacker connecting to the victim sometime and means the victim connecting the attacker sometime.
I first suppose the snort are protecting the home net, so the participant in the home net would be the victim. However, I found some specical case.
For example, for the alert 'BACKDOOR FsSniffer connection attempt', its rule is :
alert tcp $HOME_NET any -> $EXTERNAL_NET any (msg:"BACKDOOR FsSniffer connection attempt"; flow:to_server,established; content:"RemoteNC Control Password|3A|"; reference:nessus,11854; classtype:trojan-activity; sid:2271; rev:2;)
The flow: to_server seems indicating that an attacker in the homenet are connecting a external victim.
So, should I judge the roles by the flow option? Is the flow option accurate enough to support my analysis? I seems to have seen some inconsistent case about the flow option.
By the way, an another related case is the alert 'WEB-CLIENT Outlook EML access'. For the alert, who is the attacker and who is the victim?
Thank you very much!
Best regards!
Mingming
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