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Hacking Away Last year, nearly 52 Indian websites were attacked by hackers, mostly believed to be from across the border in Pakistan. Critical sites including those belonging to the Indian Army, BARC, VSNL and SEBI were part of this little-envied, forced fraternity. Indian cyber enthusiasts, in response, were keen on signing up for the "Indian Cyber Army" if there was any such association. There is of course no such association, at least not yet. Meanwhile, our systems and networks are not safe from hackers. Hacking today has taken on serious implications. It's morphed from simply using up system resources, 'Net time and saving porn on hard drives to Denial of Service (DoS) attacks, mail bombs and penetration of secure information areas. Hacking, some veterans say was never a wholly disreputable activity. Preferring the term "cracking" to hacking, these individuals legitimately find security loopholes in software programs. They call themselves "Ethical hackers" or "White hackers" as opposed to "Malicious hackers." Distinguishing between the two, however will depend on what the hacker does after he breaks into the system. If its any consolation to individuals who perceive themselves as powerless in the face of hacker attacks, corporates are not any better off. According to a CII-PricewaterhouseCoopers survey on IT security in Indian companies, only 57 percent have any informal or no security policy in place. This is in spite of 60 percent of the companies having faced security breaches of some variety over the last year. These violations ranged from unauthorised entry, fraudulent use of telecommunications, virus infections and theft of corporate data to denial of service attacks. Hackers often fall between the 14-29 years age group, are male and have ample time to spare. You will find amongst them the script kiddies, the technicians and the professionals. The
Script Kiddies The
Technicians The
Industrial spies Preventing
hacker attacks Software operating on systems that are connected to the Internet is a popular entry point for hackers, especially via their back end components. Make note of all the software you use and bookmark the sites of the software vendors to get their updates and patches. You can also sign up for services that will send you newsletters on updates. Some sites specialise in computer and network security. They often post system vulnerabilities well before a vendor brings out a fix. L0pht.com and 403-security.org are two sites which can give you the latest on security information. Try and use unique passwords. These typically should be a combination of alphanumeric, special characters, lowercase and uppercase letters (or use Password Agent, reviewed in it@tt, 9 January 2001 -Ed). Change passwords as often as possible. Do not send credit card information to sites that do not use some form of encryption technology. Install firewall software, to shield entry of unauthorised users via the Internet. Archive your data on removable media at frequent intervals. Also check your computer user logs regularly. This way you can be aware of any unusual activity or usage. Many people have advocated an Association to help Indian Web site owners secure their sites from such attacks. There is as yet no government protection for the (proposed) Indian Cyber Society. What countries like the US and Switzerland have that India lacks is a "Computer Emergency Response Team" (CERT). Such a CERT, initiated and funded by the government, with more than adequate support from the industry, will certainly help throw many hackers and virus propagators so far off-course so they never return.
Radhika Peddi |
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