[VoiceOps] Hackers Crash Clay Co. Phones ...

Tim Jackson jackson.tim at gmail.com
Mon Aug 18 21:59:10 EDT 2014


I think Ryan's point here is getting data on in-progress calls into it
instead of completed calls..

AFAIK CPM basically watches the real time call logs from the CFS, and only
knows about calls once they complete.
On Aug 18, 2014 6:04 PM, "Simon Dredge" <Simon.Dredge at metaswitch.com> wrote:

> Heya, Ryan - It's SAS-like - But proactive analysis rather than reactive
> analytics. It'll trigger immediately (in real-time) on an anomaly,
> informing the operator that action is required so they can take necessary
> action.
>
> Cheers,
>
>
> Simon.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ryan Delgrosso [mailto:ryandelgrosso at gmail.com]
> Sent: Monday, August 18, 2014 4:32 PM
> To: Simon Dredge
> Cc: voiceops at voiceops.org
> Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] Hackers Crash Clay Co. Phones ...
>
> Simon,
> I think the gotcha with CPM in this scenario is its a great tool for
> determining "this has happened" but not so great for building a mitigation
> solution.
>
> Is CPM driven off of CDR's or off of the SAS datastream or some other
> source?
>
> If its CDR driven you will be blind to this problem because you wont be
> measuring calls that are rejected due to lack of capacity(no cdr cut).
> If its driven off of SAS data you will get the missed/incomplete call
> stats but at the cost of speed (multiple orders of magnitude more data than
> CDR's)
>
> It would be interesting to hear if this perhaps uses a different
> datasource. Perhaps there is a facility in perimeta that informs this
> better than CFS data sources.
>
> -Ryan
>
> On 8/18/2014 3:36 PM, Simon Dredge wrote:
> > I know many meta-users like the new-ish call pattern monitor. It uses
> weighted profiling benchmarking algos similar to NBAD:
> >
> > http://www.metaswitch.com/sites/default/files/Metaswitch-Call-Pattern-
> > Monitor.pdf
> >
> > Cheers,
> >
> >
> > Simon.
> >
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: VoiceOps [mailto:voiceops-bounces at voiceops.org] On Behalf Of
> > Ryan Delgrosso
> > Sent: Monday, August 18, 2014 1:53 PM
> > To: ECG - Mark Lindsey
> > Cc: voiceops at voiceops.org
> > Subject: Re: [VoiceOps] Hackers Crash Clay Co. Phones ...
> >
> > I dunno that's a slippery slope. Im not a proponent of putting
> management of your network services into someone elses hands, especially
> things like this where the service provider should have visibility into
> what they are or are not admitting.
> >
> > Agreed on your synopsis of call admission control, the border should be
> able to make these decisions rapidly, freeing up softswitch resources to
> actually serve customers.
> >
> > This sounds like good territory for an acme SPL plugin, possibly in
> > conjunction with this enum extension
> > http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-kaplan-enum-source-uri-00
> unfortunately i dont see a clear path for this in the TDM world but my
> exposure there is limited. It would seem like a good solution might be
> using ENUM (with source URI) to build statistics centrally based on
> calling/called numbers and then forcing the ENUM response once thresholds
> are hit to illicit an appropriate decline message for flagged invites with
> a retry-after interval allowing you to effectively throttle specific call
> scenarios assuming your origination carriers will behave correctly.
> >
> > 2 of the examples we discussed previously were:
> >
> > 1: Social media death star. Justin biebers (or anyone else with millions
> of rabid followers) twitter account  (53.7M followers) gets hacked and
> attacker tweets "Call this number for free tickets" or similar.
> >
> > 2: T-DOS using stolen sip accounts effectively turning other service
> providers into a death star. More damage per source number (higher CPS than
> social media per attacker but less distributed source). This one seems much
> easier to create given the ease with which stolen sip accounts can be
> acquired, and harder to mitigate if the stolen accounts support callerID
> spoofing.
> >
> > Both of these situations are exacerbated by LCR resellers creating at
> times 10-20 invites from 1 due to route advancing when the destination is
> truly congested, which gets worse when the LCR resellers in turn have
> resellers in route etc etc.
> >
> > Of course any solution needs to have provisions for conveying congestion
> control to the originating network so they stop route advancing.
> >
> >
> > I think this has commercial viability for access providers protecting
> > their customers business interests and for implementers designing
> > solutions but perhaps not so much in a carrier to carrier capacity
> > (beyond appropriate support of signaling congestion control).
> >
> >
> > On 8/18/2014 12:48 PM, Mark R Lindsey wrote:
> >> Ryan, does it seem as though TDoS will be most effectively addressed by
> the origination companies?  i.e., the guys with the TDM trunks to the local
> tandems, such as incumbents, Verizon, Level(3).
> >>
> >> It seems to me that some use of statistics could probably make
> reasonable guesses about whether a given PSTN origination call is likely to
> be legitimate (for a call from A to B). For example, I'll bet you could
> make a good start looking at numbers and geographic areas:
> >>
> >>      -- Has telephone number A called to telephone number B before? Or
> B->A ?
> >>
> >>      -- Has GeographicArea(A) called to telephone number B before? Or
> GeographicArea(B) -> A?
> >>
> >> The more you know about telephone numbers A and B, the more you could
> guess about the likelihood that a given call is legitimate.
> >>
> >> And getting good at this should be a competitive advantage, just as
> effective anti-spam is an advantage elsewhere. Vendors that build the edge
> gear -- in particular, the SBC and TDM SS7 gateway vendors -- should be
> leading the way.
> >>
> >> And wholesale carriers could take some advantage and make it broadly
> available. For example, let's say Verizon came along and said, "Here's a
> reason to port your numbers from Level(3) to us: When you're under attack,
> we're going to be smart about the ways we selectively admit calls to your
> network."
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>>>> mark at ecg.co +1-229-316-0013 http://ecg.co/lindsey
> >> On Aug 18, 2014, at 13:52 , Ryan Delgrosso <ryandelgrosso at gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >>
> >>> IP DDOS and TDOS are really two different problems but yes we as
> ITSP's and CLECs living in the IP space are absolutely susceptible to both.
> >>>
> >>> Ive done a fair amount of research into both of these topics and we
> have seen varying cases of both, but usually IP DDOS steals the spotlight
> because the numbers are bigger and the effects are usually more widespread
> whereas a TDOS attack is rarely felt by anyone that doesn't live in the
> affected region or isn't actively trying to call the victim, and usually
> telcos keep these issues pretty close to the chest.
> >>>
> >>> I expect this sort of attack is going to increase in magnitude in the
> coming 24-36 months as attackers figure out how to wield it. Mark Collier
> gave a very interesting talk at one of the CFCA events on this topic,
> though the focus was on the enterprise victim, but the lessons are really
> the same. There just arent really any good tools to mitigate this sort of
> attack today, especially at the carrier level.
> >>>
> >>> -Ryan
> >>>
> >>> On 8/18/2014 6:30 AM, Matt Yaklin wrote:
> >>>> It seems like almost every telephone company can be hit like that
> >>>> except the ?largest?...
> >>>>
> >>>> A denial of service attack by simply calling so many times it fills
> >>>> up their main trunks.
> >>>>
> >>>> And we saw how the large IP colo providers handle this for
> >>>> customers who get dos'd. The amount of bandwidth they have is
> >>>> staggering and they still cannot guarantee you will stay up if a
> >>>> ?skilled? attacker wants you down. So you keep throwing money at it
> >>>> until you are so well established online that you look at your
> >>>> monthly bill and want to puke.
> >>>>
> >>>> matt
> >>>>
> >>>> On Mon, 18 Aug 2014, Frank Bulk wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>> http://www.wibw.com/home/headlines/Hackers-Behind-Phone-Outage-In-
> >>>>> Clay-County-271463051.html?ref=051
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Painful issue for Big River Telephone!
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Frank
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
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