Group Members:-Imran Rashid Riya Kumari Nabanita Ghosh Samrat Ghosh
Group Members:-Imran Rashid Riya Kumari Nabanita Ghosh Samrat Ghosh
Group Members:-Imran Rashid Riya Kumari Nabanita Ghosh Samrat Ghosh
IP spoofing
IP spoofing is a technique used to gain unauthorized access to computers, where by the attacker sends messages to a computer with a forging IP address indicating that the message is coming from a trusted host.
Attacker puts an internal, or trusted, IP address as its source. The access control device sees the IP
IP Spoofing
IP spoofing occurs when a hacker inside or outside a network
impersonates the conversations of a trusted computer. Two general techniques are used during IP spoofing: A hacker uses an IP address that is within the range of trusted IP addresses. A hacker uses an authorized external IP address that is trusted. Uses for IP spoofing include the following: IP spoofing is usually limited to the injection of malicious data or commands into an existing stream of data. A hacker changes the routing tables to point to the spoofed IP address, then the hacker can receive all the network packets that are addressed to the spoofed address and reply just as any trusted user can.
What is IP Adress
a numerical label assigned to each device
An IP address serves two principal functions: host or network interface identification and location
addressing. IP address as a 32-bit number known as Internet Protocol Version 4 (IPv4) IP address as a 128-bit number known as Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6)
IP Spoofing
easy.
Spoofing Attacks:
There are a few variations on the types of attacks that using IP spoofing. Spoofing is classified into :1.non-blind spoofing This attack takes place when the attacker is on the same subnet as the target that could see sequence and acknowledgement of packets.
Using the spoofing to interfere with a connection that sends packets along your subnet.
Spoofing Attacks:
impersonation
sender partner
victim
Spoofing Attacks:
2. Blind spoofing This attack may take place from outside where sequence and acknowledgement numbers are unreachable. Attackers usually send several packets to the target machine in order to sample sequence numbers, which is doable in older days . Using the spoofing to interfere with a connection (or creating one), that does not send packets along your cable.
Spoofing Attacks:
flooding attack
sender
Oops, many packets are coming. But, who is the real source?
victim
Spoofing Attacks:
3.Man in the Middle Attack This is also called connection hijacking. In this attacks, a malicious party intercepts a legitimate communication between two hosts to controls the flow of communication and to eliminate or alter the information sent by one of the original participants without their knowledge.
Spoofing Attacks:
reflection
sender ip spoofed packet src: victim dst: reflector
reflector
victim
Spoofing Attacks:
4.Denial of Service Attack conducting the attack, attackers spoof source IP addresses to make tracing and stopping the DoS as difficult as possible. When multiple compromised hosts are participating in the attack, all sending spoofed traffic, it is very challenging to quickly block the traffic.
IP spoofing is almost always used in denial of service
attacks (DoS), in which attackers are concerned with consuming bandwidth and resources by flooding the target with as many packets as possible in a short amount of time. To effectively
Misconception of IP Spoofing:
A common misconception is that "IP Spoofing" can be used to hide your IP address while surfing the Internet, chatting on-line, sending e-mail, and so forth. This is generally not true. Forging the source IP address causes the responses to be misdirected, meaning you cannot create a normal network connection. However, IP spoofing is an integral part of many networks that do not need to see responses.
Detection of IP Spoofing:
1. If you monitor packets using network-monitoring software such as netlog, look for a packet on your external interface that has both its source and destination IP addresses in your local domain. If you find one, you are currently under attack.
Detection of IP Spoofing:
2. Another way to detect IP spoofing is to compare the process accounting logs between systems on your internal network. If the IP spoofing attack has succeeded on one of your systems, you may get a log entry on the victim machine showing a remote access; on the apparent source machine, there will be no corresponding entry for initiating that remote access.
Prevention IP spoofing
The best method of preventing the IP spoofing problem is to install a filtering router that restricts the input to your external interface (known as an input filter) by not allowing a packet through if it has a source address from your internal network. In addition, you should filter outgoing packets that have a source address different from your internal network in order to prevent a source IP spoofing attack originating from your site.
Prevention IP spoofing
If your vendors router does not support filtering on the inbound side of the interface or if there will be a delay in incorporating the feature into your system, you may filter the spoofed IP packets by using a second router between your external interface and your outside connection. Configure this router to block, on the outgoing interface connected to your original router, all packets that have a source address in your internal network.
Prevention of IP Spoofing:
To prevent IP spoofing happen in your network, the following are some common practices:
1- Avoid using the source address authentication. Implement cryptographic authentication system-wide.
2- Configuring your network to reject packets from the Net that claim to originate from a local address.
3- Implementing ingress and egress filtering on the border routers and implement an ACL (access control list) that blocks private IP addresses on your downstream interface. If you allow outside connections from trusted hosts, enable encryption sessions at the router.