chacho_world (imported) wrote: Tue Dec 05, 2006 2:02 pm
I'm sure there are those here who can use this.
Damn spammer.
Die.
I ran a quick scan with nmap (
http://insecure.org/nmap/), to see what information we can uncover about their network and system from the first IP (201.230.40.191)
Starting Nmap 4.20 (
http://insecure.org ) at 2006-12-09 20:36 GMT Standard Time
Interesting ports on client-201.230.40.191.speedy.net.pe (201.230.40.191):
Not shown: 1686 closed ports
PORT STATE SERVICE
21/tcp open ftp
23/tcp open telnet
80/tcp open http
135/tcp filtered msrpc
137/tcp filtered netbios-ns
138/tcp filtered netbios-dgm
139/tcp filtered netbios-ssn
445/tcp filtered microsoft-ds
593/tcp filtered http-rpc-epmap
1434/tcp filtered ms-sql-m
5190/tcp open aol
Device type: general purpose
Running (JUST GUESSING) : Linux 2.4.X|2.5.X|2.6.X (91%)
Aggressive OS guesses: Linux 2.4.0 - 2.5.20 (91%), Linux 2.5.5 (Gentoo) (91%), L
inux 2.6.10 (91%), Linux 2.4.22 - 2.6.8 (89%), Linux 2.4.7 - 2.6.11 (89%), Linux
2.6.4 (Suse) (89%), Linux 2.4.0 - 2.5.20 w/o tcp_timestamps (86%), Linux 2.6.0-
test9 - 2.6.0 (x86) (86%), Linux 2.4.22-gentoo-r2 i686 (86%)
No exact OS matches for host (test conditions non-ideal).
Uptime: 0.281 days (since Sat Dec 09 13:52:42 2006)
Network Distance: 16 hops
OS detection performed. Please report any incorrect results at
http://insecure.o
rg/nmap/submit/ .
Nmap finished: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 57.000 seconds
They are most likely running a variant of Linux, have telnet services on socket 23, and ftp access on socket 21, so you could try running a program like Brutus (
http://www.hoobie.net/brutus/brutus-aet2.zip)(Brute Force Remote Password Cracker) which will try a long combination of usernames/passwords systematically until a combination is found that grants you access to the users system. (There are plenty of free alternative programs out there!)
The problem with this method is time. Each failed login attempt will almost certainly be logged!) It would only be a matter of time before someone noticed something was up! But there is more than one of us

That could prove to be very difficult to protect a system against.