« April 2010 · October 2010 »
|
|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
- 15.08.2010: Spam using RU domains - Who's your nameserver?
- 13.08.2010: Binary Whitelisting Service
- 02.08.2010: Of Opinions and Anti-Virus Testing
- 05.07.2010: Lies, Damn Lies, and Botnet Size
- 09.06.2010: Shadowserver Sinkholing domain associated with SQLi attacks on IIS/ASP web servers
Saturday, 1 March 2008
New Whitepaper: RBN "Rizing"
Russian Business Network (RBN)
In the last few months, there has been a significant amount of press coverage given to insidious cyber activity associated with the segment of the Internet known as the “Russian Business Network,” or RBN. Previous studies have suggested that the RBN has ties to nearly every area of cybercrime, including: phishing, malware, DDOS activity, pornography, botnets, and anonymization.
In November 2007, media reporting indicated that a large portion of the RBN “went dark.” Since that time, the Shadowserver Foundation has been more closely analyzing outlying networks implicated as being associated with RBN. One of these suspected outliers is AS9121, known as TurkTelekom. SecurityZone.org reported in early December 2007 that while not everything in TurkTelekom appears to be malicious, there are some ranges that are “particularly bad” and analysis of Shadowserver Foundation data agrees. Several subranges quickly stand out as being deeply involved in malicious cyber activity: 88.255.90.0/24 and 88.255.94.0/24. IP registration indicates these ranges are listed under the name “ABDALLAH INTERNET HIZMETLERI” (AIH).
Abdallah Internet Hizmetleri (AIH)
In one of the most thorough RBN studies to date, David Bizeul reported that AIH ranges 88.255.90.0/24 and 88.255.94.0/24 - are among the “most used network ranges used by RBN affiliates’ domain names.” The purpose of this paper is to take a deeper look at these two class C ranges of AIH based out of Rize, Turkey, available information from the Internet, and statistics collected by the Shadowserver Foundation to provide further insight into the scope and depth of the RBN.
Read the full paper or view all of our posted whitepapers.


