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... an attack. Sleuthing The first thing Clivedidwas simply to see what machine Martin was posting from by looking at the we b server logs. By matching the timestampson the messages against the Hacking Exposed ...



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APPENDIX Case Studies I nthefollowing case studies, we let you into the heads of three crackers as they break into machines. We let you watch every success and failure, every command typed, and how the administrators were able to catch them, if at all. By letting you "watch"these experiences directly through the eyes of the cracker, youllhopefullysee what youre up against, so you are better prepared to defend your systems. These case studies draw upon material found throughout the book. All are real hacks, exactly as they happened. Just dont ask us who any of the participants really were. CASE STUDY A This case study follows a simple intrusion. It highlights the following: ▼You should never reuse your passwords on untrusted machines. ■Access lists are not sufficient protection when an attacker can access your trusted machines. ▲Good log checking can catch problems early and allow you to fend off attacks before they become serious. As always, the names here have been changed. If you want a clue as to who these people    are, you can start playing with anagrams. Background Martin Sardoitand Clive Kraheweretwo fellows who shared a number of common interests.      They were on many of the samelistservs, they visited the same IRC chat rooms, and they visited the same web pages. For reasons even theydforgotten, they hated each other, flaming each other online every time they had a chance. One of the email lists to which they both subscribed was becoming too difficult to manage, so the members decided to turn it into a web message board. Clivedecidedto administer it, along with some other list members. One of the nice things about the message     board was that it would require authentication to prevent people from forging messages—something                  that was becom ...

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