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Few things can strike fear into the heart of the IT department like an attack on a company's Domain Name System servers. That may explain why companies are spending so much time to deploy myriad, complex security measures to keep their DNS protected from malicious attackers.
A study released Wednesday of 465 IT and business professionals says despite the Sisyphean efforts, many companies remain vulnerable. More than half the respondents reported having fallen victim to some form of malware attack. More than one-third had been hit by a denial-of-service (DoS) attack, and more than 44% had experienced a pharming or cache-poisoning attack. External and internal DNS servers were equally vulnerable: Both types succumbed to attacks with roughly the same frequency, according to the study by Mazerov Research and Consulting.
A DNS server compromised by a hacker could be used to funnel Web surfers to all sorts of phishing attacks and malicious Web sites, and in some cases even could cause havoc with directory services and e-mail, said Paul Mockapetris, the father of the DNS technology, in a Network World story earlier this year. “Once you control the DNS server, you have license to do phishing and pharming attacks and mislead all the users of that DNS server,” said Mockapetris, who in 1983 proposed the DNS architecture and is acknowledged, along with the late Jon Postel, as the technology’s inventor.
According to the Mazerov study, DoS attacks are prevalent among the respondents, with only 16% never having experienced one, although more than 10% said they often or frequently receive DoS attacks to their network. What also is interesting is that, while a total of 59% of respondents rarely or never experience DoS attacks, a surprisingly high 41% experience them. The study found that the top forms of DNS attack are malware (worms, viruses, Trojans and so forth), 68%; denial of service, 48%; cache poisoning, 36%; and pharming, 23%.
The patching game seems to be the method of choice for protecting DNS. Three-quarters of all respondents devote valuable resources to patching their operating systems continuously. Others reported having to harden operating systems; invest in dedicated firewalls; and add DNS appliances, DoS mitigation services and other network security devices. On average, respondents typically used at least 3.5 overlapping methods simultaneously to shore up their DNS security.

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Comments (2)
Sisyphos Or Hercules?By Anonymous on July 20, 2007, 5:05 pmIf the task were Sisyphean, the respondents would be working relentlessly but they'd all be failing each time, succumbing to attacks with predictable, monotonous,...
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RE: Is IT losing the battle against DNS attacks?By meatpieandtatters on July 18, 2007, 5:31 pmThe survey results are so predictable. Re: Is IT losing the battle against DNS attacks? Everyone is banking on the next best security box to solve all their...
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