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Alan
This one is dangerous. Combine it with the virus/trojan that attempts to change DNS settings in routers and you have a recipie for disaster. One infected computer on a network and all computers on the network are vulnerable.

Imagine if your ISP's DNS is compromised - wow - what a big mess that would create. I'm not so sure this hasn't happened recently. Within the past few weeks AT&T's DNS had problems. I wonder if it was related to the servers being compromised.

QUOTE
Use of rogue DNS servers on rise
By JORDAN ROBERTSON, AP Technology Writer

They're called "servers that lie."

Mendacious machines controlled by hackers that reroute Internet traffic from infected computers to fraudulent Web sites are increasingly being used to launch attacks, according to a paper published this week by researchers with the Georgia Institute of Technology and Google Inc.

The paper estimates roughly 68,000 servers on the Internet are returning malicious Domain Name System results, which means people with compromised computers are sometimes being directed to the wrong Web sites — and often have no idea.

The peer-reviewed paper, which offers one of the broadest measurements yet of the number of rogue DNS servers, was presented at the Internet Society's Network and Distributed System Security Symposium in San Diego.

The fraud works like this: When a user with an affected computer tries to go to, for example, Google's Web site, they are redirected to a spoof site loaded with malicious code or to a wall of ads whose profits flow back to the hackers.

The hackers who hijack DNS queries are looking to steal personal information, from e-mail login credentials to credit data, and take over infected machines.

The spoof sites run the gamut. Some are stunningly convincing, others amusingly bogus with spelling errors and typos.

The DNS system is a critical part of the Internet's infrastructure, used to make sure computers know how to contact each other. People usually automatically use the DNS servers of their Internet providers, but the recent wave of attacks modify the settings on victims' computers to send traffic to rogue DNS servers.

Attacks using manipulated DNS results aren't new. Profit-driven hackers have a strong incentive to control where users go on the Web. The paper looked at viruses that started appearing in 2003 designed to alter the DNS settings on infected computers.

The report noted the rogue DNS servers don't always return incorrect results, often fooling users into believing their Internet access is working properly. Hackers thus can route users to malicious Web sites whenever they choose.

Most up-to-date antivirus software will catch and banish the viruses used to change DNS settings. Once a computer's been infected, users need to run a new scan with the latest software and change their DNS settings back — which is easy.

Security experts not involved in preparing the paper said it adds valuable data about the scope of an increasingly popular type of attack.

"A lot of people don't realize the seriousness of it," said Paul Ferguson, a threat researcher with Trend Micro Inc. "The problem is getting worse."
Alan
By the way - I just want to mention that on many other forums there are posts from people saying they manually edited the DNS settings in their computers/routers to free servers on the Internet when the ISP was having problems. I think this is dangerous. Do these people really know who is running these servers and how secure they are?
n99nyrwg
QUOTE (Alan @ 2-13-08, 5:30pm) *
By the way - I just want to mention that on many other forums there are posts from people saying they manually edited the DNS settings in their computers/routers to free servers on the Internet when the ISP was having problems. I think this is dangerous. Do these people really know who is running these servers and how secure they are?


I hadn't heard of people doing that. I agree, seems dangerous. I would never consider doing it. I've changed DNS to another DNS owned by my ISP, but not just some random one.
Alan
Go over to broadbandreports.com. Whenever an ISP has DNS issues people change the settings to free servers that are out there. I've seen this on other tech forums as well. You never know when a server will be hacked into or when a sys sdmin goes bad.
GTFan
Well you can always use the more reliable ones run by ISP's such as Verizon. I've been using 4.2.2.1 through 4.2.2.8 for years because they have been much more stable and faster than Bellsouth (now AT&T) or Comcast.
Miranda
QUOTE (GTFan @ 2-14-08, 4:40am) *
Well you can always use the more reliable ones run by ISP's such as Verizon. I've been using 4.2.2.1 through 4.2.2.8 for years because they have been much more stable and faster than Bellsouth (now AT&T) or Comcast.


I use the Verizon ones too when I have problems with my ISP because the numbers are easy to remember. I mostly just use my ISP though.
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