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The seven 'guardian angels' of the Web
Social media like Facebook and Twitter are shaping lifestyles in many countries, making them prime targets for hackers. To ensure safe and profitable browsing, monitoring is needed and that is where solutions like Cyberoam come in. Photo/FILE
Posted Friday, September 3 2010 at 16:07
In Summary
How vulnerable is the net?
- Icann’s key holder system aims to protect the internet against the DNS hijackers, but are there more prevalent threats to connectivity?
- In 2008 two underwater cables were severed bringing internet blackouts to 15 countries in the Middle East and Asia – 80 per cent of Indian connectivity was hit, triggering market panic. Sabotage? No, satellite images identified two ships that had dropped anchors on fibre optics.
- An al-Qaeda plot to attack Telehouse Europe – the UK’s leading internet hub – was uncovered in 2007 by Scotland Yard. The attack may have rendered much of the UK without internet, but server farms are built with security in mind, away from airports and in reinforced buildings.
- The Melissa virus in 1999 “wreaked havoc on government and private sector networks” according to the FBI. The ILOVEYOU bug in 2000 infected 1 in 10 net-connected computers, causing billions-worth of damage. Anti-viral software has improved vastly since and terrorist electronic attacks are nullified by experts. A virus capable of bringing down the internet would face the greatest minds in the field.
- Social engineering – manipulating people to divulge confidential information – is commonplace but is often for personal gain, not destruction. But with eight per cent of internet traffic said to be fraudulent, threats to security do exist – DNS hijacking, viruses, or physical damage – and Icann’s cautious approach is warranted. Anthony Pearce
The internet has its very own magnificent seven. They are a group of security experts across the globe who can reboot cyberspace if it comes under attack. Jerome Taylor discovers more
On a Thursday evening in December a remarkable attack by a shadowy group of hackers briefly paralysed Twitter. For two hours anyone who typed www.twitter.com into their internet explorer’s address bar was re-routed to a simple black screen showing a green flag and the words: “This site has been hacked by the Iranian Cyber Army.”
Beneath the flag was a line of Persian poetry which read: “We shall strike if the leader orders, we shall lose our heads if the leader wishes.” The attack caused ripples of excitement within the online community but it was largely thought to be a one-off.
Yet a month later the same group launched an equally bold assault on Baidu, China’s most popular search engine. For more than four hours a website which handles 60 per cent of the world’s most-populous nation’s web searches was completely inaccessible.
Both instances employed a specific type of hack known as a “DNS attack” and together they provoked an avalanche of discussion among cyber security experts.
Acts like a digital phone book
DNS stands for Domain Name System and in many ways it is the beating heart of the internet. Computers are only able to read numbers, which means that every website address is given an individual numerical code (known as an IP address) which is stored on two vast servers at opposing ends of the United States.
When we type in a web address, the DNS acts like an enormous digital phone book, matching up website names to the correct numbers and ensuring that we actually reach the website we want to get to rather than an impostor’s site. Without it, trust in the internet – the most important concept in cyber security – would be broken.
A world without DNS would create online anarchy because we would never know whether the website we were visiting – be it a bank account, Facebook, our email or a government site – was real or a fake. The Iranian Cyber Army’s attacks were significant because they had successfully broken into the DNS system and rerouted traffic away from Twitter and Baidu.
The assaults only targeted two websites and the damage was quickly rectified. But it begged a series of frightening hypotheticals: what if cyber criminals were able to take control of DNS? What if they took the whole system offline? For a number of years such a prospect had been causing sleepless nights at the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (Icann), the non-profit independent body which effectively regulates internet addresses.
A significant attack on the DNS system could cripple the internet, sending the world back to a pre-digital dark age. In the words of Bryon Holland, CEO of the Canadian Internet Registration Authority: “If DNS were to stop working, it would render the internet effectively non-responsive.”
Icann realised that if the DNS system was ever brought down, someone would have to be given the job of bringing the world back online. You couldn’t entrust that responsibility to a single group of experts based in one facility because the internet was supposed to be a truly global entity, universally accessible and outside the reach of a single sovereign state.
It would also be much easier to steal the tools needed to rebuild the internet if they were all hanging up in the same shed. So in July, in an announcement that could have come straight out of a Dan Brown novel, Icann announced that the internet would be protected by seven “guardians” on three different continents whose job would be to reboot the internet if the DNS system was ever critically impaired.
Planning for worst scenario
The announcement sent bloggers and conspiracy theorists into apoplexies of feverish speculation – here is a secret Lord of the Rings-style fellowship of gallant internet knights poised to protect the internet from total annihilation. The reality might be a little less sexy but it goes right to the heart of whether the internet could ever fail.
Icann itself describes the key holders as “an elite international circle of trust charged with restarting the internet in the event of a global catastrophe”. Seven people, including Paul Kane, a British cyber expert from Bath, have been given smart cards in tamper-proof evidence bags which they must keep safe at all costs.
Each card contains a portion of coding which will enable technicians to restart the DNS system should it be taken over. The other card holders are based in Canada, Trinidad and Tobago, Burkina Faso, the Czech Republic, China and the United States. In the event of a catastrophic attack on the Domain Name System, at least five of the seven card holders would need to travel to one of two secure facilities in the US to reboot the system.
The exact locations of the facilities are not published but it is thought one of them is in a heavily guarded compound in Virginia whilst the other is on the west coast somewhere in the desert, possibly Nevada. Speaking about his new-found responsibility, Mr Kane says he has placed his card in a secure facility. But he is keen to stress that the chances of him ever needing to use it are very small.




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