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Gerry Smith
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Internet Providers Agree to Fight 'Zombie' Computer Networks

Posted: 03/22/2012 3:08 pm Updated: 03/22/2012 9:04 pm

Botnets

Every month, about four million computers turn into zombies, according to researchers.

Unbeknownst to their owners, who have accidentally clicked on a malicious link or file, the infected computers get recruited to join botnets -- or global networks of remote-controlled PCs that cyber criminals use to crash websites, swipe passwords or steal consumer financial data.

Experts say botnets have become a serious threat to the digital economy. And now, Internet service providers are joining the fight to destroy them.

On Thursday, the Federal Communications Commission announced commitments from most of the nation's big Internet service providers to adhere to a voluntary "code of conduct" to fight botnets. The code calls on the providers to detect whether customers' computers have become robots -- or "bots" -- and notify and help customers whose computers are infected.

"If you own a PC, you’ll be significantly better protected against your computer being taken over by a bad actor who could destroy your private files or steal your personal information," FCC Chair Julius Genachowski said Thursday, as he announced the "code of conduct" suggested by a federal advisory group known as the Communications, Security, Reliability, and Interoperability Council (CSRIC).

Thousands of botnets have taken over millions of computers around the world. One of the largest botnets infected as many as 12.7 million computers in more than 190 countries. But innocent computer owners are often unaware that their PCs are performing automated tasks that help cyber criminals. Some may notice their computer being unusually slow or crashing frequently, but those problems might also be caused by unrelated hardware of software issues, according to the Microsoft Safety and Security Center.

Internet service providers are uniquely positioned to spot botnets and other cyber threats on their networks in the early stages, experts say.

On Thursday, the FCC said that AT&T, CenturyLink, Comcast, Cox, Sprint, Time Warner and Verizon all agreed to follow the recommendations made by CSRIC, which addressed not only fighting botnets but also two other major cybersecurity risks: domain name fraud and IP hijacking.

To help users surf the web, the Internet relies on a digital phone book known as the Domain Name System, or DNS, that turns the long string of numbers in an IP address into an easy-to-remember URL. Domain name fraud occurs when hackers scramble the identifying information of a website so users are misdirected to a nearly-identical but fraudulent website, where they are duped into providing their financial or other personal information. On Thursday, Internet providers agreed to adopt security protocols, known as Domain Name System Security Extensions, which help prevent domain name fraud by allowing Internet users to verify the authenticity of websites they visit.

The companies also agreed to adopt standards to validate Internet routing information and prevent "IP hijacking," which occurs when hackers misdirect Internet traffic to an insecure website in order to eavesdrop on Internet users' communications and steal or change data. In 2010, 15 percent of the world's Internet traffic was diverted through Chinese servers for about 18 minutes, according to a report by the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission.

On Thursday, Genachowski called the recommendations "a blueprint for addressing some of the biggest threats to our digital economy."

He added, "Implementing these recommendations will reduce the risks of cyber crimes that cost U.S. businesses and consumers billions of dollars every year and will enhance the security of this platform that is increasingly integrated into every aspect of our economy and society."

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Every month, about four million computers turn into zombies, according to researchers. Unbeknownst to their owners, who have accidentally clicked on a malicious link or file, the infected computer...
Every month, about four million computers turn into zombies, according to researchers. Unbeknownst to their owners, who have accidentally clicked on a malicious link or file, the infected computer...
 
 
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12:46 PM on 03/24/2012
How many of these bots are Windows machines and how many are Linux or some other operating system?

How much of this is the result of the bad design of Windows?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
guy girl
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
01:28 AM on 03/24/2012
Sounds good now, but watch, the ISP's will figure out some way to charge the consumer more for this "new feature."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JayyVee
It's not about Politics, it's about Morals..
08:46 AM on 03/23/2012
Hello people, don't set your UAC settings so darn low and you will at least be prompted before you hand your computer over.. UAC in your RUN box, and slide that slider Higher than the BOTTOM, ok? 3rd party apps to 'protect' you are too late by the time they 'tell' you for new infections - you are only protected from out-of-date material!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
booksnmoreforyou
Progressive educator, activist for good government
05:34 AM on 03/23/2012
Windows suks. Linux rulz.
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Guy Underbridge
Who's that tripping on my bridge?
03:02 AM on 03/23/2012
so basically, using the internet for anything that's not approved by AT&T, CenturyLink, Comcast, Cox, Sprint, Time Warner and Verizon is a no-no.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andre Fabre
Seth speaks, and I listen...
06:28 AM on 03/23/2012
Not quite. The real problem is the fact that Windows OS, as it is designed, is utterly insecure, and quite prone to become a zombie device. It is more difficult to infect OSX and Linux systems than Windows machines.

Convenience and security are mutually exclusive; Windows is very convenient to use, but insecure system, while OSX and Linux systems are more secure, though more inconvenient in their use.
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11:25 AM on 03/23/2012
I really get tired of hearing this propaganda. OS X is no more secure than Windows at this point. If you actually read up on security issues, you'd know this. The biggest problem almost always has been, and always will be, ignorant users. You really think Linux is more secure than Windows? Would you care to define how, particularly given all the publicly available exploits that are out there, some of which work on the kernel level? Do you think a common ignorant user is going to know how to defend against such attacks, or would have the interest in doing so?

Using any of the popular OSs is fine if you practice the following safe computing steps:

1.) Use a firewall and block all incoming connections. Very few common users will need a machine to listen for incoming connections on ports.

2.) Install NoScript, or a similar 3rd party plugin, which disables javascripting and protects against other vulnerabilities in your browser, and can be managed in the same way you can manage cookies from sites.

3.) Don't click on links or run attachments that you didn't personally ask for.

4.) Don't download pirated software or run any program that a site says you need to run in order to watch pirated films.

If you follow the above steps, regardless of what OS you are running, it is highly unlikely that your machine will ever become part of a botnet.
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01:14 AM on 03/23/2012
Am guessing they will block more ports than they already are. It bad news because you can spend hours messing with port forwarding only to realise that your router is doing the job fine but the freaking ISP is meddling with YOUR traffic! If ISP really want to help kill those botnets they just need to spend money on PSA. The biggest security weakness is the user sitting 7 inch from the screen.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mairs
11:31 PM on 03/22/2012
Is that picture the HP staff?

:) Kidding! KIDDING!!!
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10:04 PM on 03/22/2012
Why haven't they been doing this before now?

There are specific services, including w/i providers family of companies, that get paid specifically to protect computers from viruses (Think Mcafee & Norton);
however, I suspect three things are new:

(1) These companies are now established and their services profitable and they believe they will be able to stay in business even if it become known that there is now a web-widejoint effort to secure the web from these problems so computers should become more secure even w/o paid service for it; and

(2) The skill level of the criminals is growing by leaps and bounds (even likely some are state-sponsored) so the ability of these services to provide that protection individually is becoming more difficult making cooperation preferable to cut-throat competition;

(3) The viruses can and have infect government computers with adverse affect; so, it is likely the government has told these companies that they must do this voluntarily or the government will REQUIRE and regulate their doing this task--so the companies decided voluntary now was better than required and regulated later.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Louis Bernardi
I live in a treehouse!
08:29 PM on 03/22/2012
Very well written article. I appreciate that the news from the FCC is actually good news, for once.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jstjoe
Secure the blessings of liberty
08:03 PM on 03/22/2012
Oh GOODY !! The oh-so-unintrusive Federal Government is going to poke around in my computer in order to keep OTHER criminals from doing malicious things.
...I'll take my chances with the botnets.
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11:26 PM on 03/22/2012
I'd be curious to see more of what the plan entails, as there's no suggestion in this article that they will be poking around on your computer yet.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ResearchtheFacts
Alert, awake & paying attention to the details.
08:00 PM on 03/22/2012
Look at the list of backers...the FCC said that AT&T, CenturyLink, Comcast, Cox, Sprint, Time Warner and Verizon all agreed to follow the recommendations made by CSRIC.

ATT is the criminal enabler, there is a story here in the tech section saying the government is suing ATT for enabling fraud.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ResearchtheFacts
Alert, awake & paying attention to the details.
07:56 PM on 03/22/2012
Or crashing because of MS updates.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Turukano
In 20 years, everyone will say they voted Obama
07:34 PM on 03/22/2012
Wait for it, wait for it ... this is when the folks that worship cyberterrorists are going to call this a war on the internet ...
07:56 PM on 03/22/2012
The war has already begun, this is just another battle. Oooh... they blocked access to websites for a few hours!! Grab your pitchforks everyone, these guys are TERRORISTS! Get real.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Turukano
In 20 years, everyone will say they voted Obama
08:26 PM on 03/22/2012
Anarchism is just vulgar.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ADRealist
High expectations are the key to everything.
03:45 AM on 03/23/2012
Uh oh. The word "terroism" is getting thrown around again.

Does that mean our military budget gets to go from 16x greater than all of our allies combined... to something even bigger now?

That's okay. Just like the war in Iraq and Afghanistan:

A.) It won't stop terrorism. (the fcc isn't going to stop hackers. They will just work around it.

B.) You will lose more freedoms than you already have.

Keep making excuses. You will run out of protections to be taken away and then there won't be anything more to worry about.
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11:44 PM on 03/22/2012
You still have yet to point to a legal definition of a "cyberterrorist." Your fear has made you easy to manipulate.
05:41 PM on 03/22/2012
This is just an excuse to monitor our computers and I completely oppose it. If they want to offer the OPTION of scanning your computer or some kind of software you can use to check YOUR OWN computer, fine. I don't need my ISP randomly inspecting my computer because I don't like them and I don't trust them. What a bunch of malarkey this is.
08:05 PM on 03/22/2012
I agree. If they don't offer a way to opt-out, it's a violation of privacy and an obvious attempt at controlling the internet. They probably made a deal with the US gov't... implement this and they will look the other way for the backroom deal with Verizon. All speculation of course, but it wouldn't surprise me.
10:42 PM on 03/22/2012
But this seems to go beyond controlling the Internet. Here, they are checking your computer, which means they have access to your files. The ones on your computer, not the ones on the Internet. Super shady!
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11:28 PM on 03/22/2012
Am I missing something? From what was described, it's merely a security check on DNS entries, which won't scan your computer, or a security check on websites that serve malware, which also won't scan your computer.
11:41 PM on 03/22/2012
You aren't missing anything. OGalaxy should stick to HuffPost Weddings instead of attempting to run their mouths about tech. It's clear this isn't in their wheelhouse.
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tazmodious
Left Hand of Darkness
05:39 PM on 03/22/2012
Just download Spybot Search and Destroy. Malware Bytz and Avast Antivirus. All are free and they work great at keeping my computer safe. All of the programs come highly reccommended by CNET and my local computer repair guy.
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11:28 PM on 03/22/2012
All are your absolute last line of defense. The problem is that, if they've trigged an alarm for you, it's likely too late.