Despite the hoo-hah created by the conviction of teenager David Lennon for
email-bombing his ex-employer, he was a "rank amateur" and firms should be
prepared for more sophisticated and insidious attacks, say security experts.
Lennon, 19, was convicted this week under
Section
3 of the
Computer
Misuse Act of bringing down the mail server of UK insurer
Domestic
& General in 2004 by sending five million emails reading 'You will die
in seven days', a quote from
The
Ring.
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Domestic & General claimed that the attack cost the company £30,000 in
lost business.
Although Lennon could have received a five-year jail sentence under the Act,
the judge handed down a two-month curfew and an electronic tagging order.
Some observers believe that Lennon got off lightly. But so did his employer,
according to security experts who deal with increasingly sophisticated
email-bombing and denial of service (DoS) attacks and theft of intellectual
property and personal data by insiders.
"[Lennon's] attack was relatively simple: it would have come from a single IP
address making it easy to block and easy to identify where it came from," said
Matt Sergeant, senior anti-spam technologist at security firm
MessageLabs.
Lennon used a commercial mass-email package called Avalanche. The software is
no longer available but was used legitimately by electronic direct mail
agencies.
Even though he spoofed the email addresses of employees of Domestic &
General and
Microsoft
chairman Bill Gates, tracing the sending IP address was a relatively easy task.
Modern mail-bomb and DoS attackers are professional cyber-criminals who rent
zombie networks from black-hat hackers, launching concerted attacks from
multiple IP addresses using innocent PCs infected with Trojans.
Sergeant said that he has seen networks of 10,000 zombie PCs offered for as
little as £50 a day.
Targeting web-dependent businesses, the criminals then extort money by
offering to cease the attack if the company pays a protection fee.
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