Australian hacker activity on the rise

An Internet Security Report released by anti-virus vendor Symantec has revealed that Australia has joined the ranks of international hacker sources.

Ranked 5th amongst the top originating countries, excluding worm-type strikes, Australia was the only new entry to the ranks tabled from hacker activity in the six months from July to December 2003.

However, the report notes that although the statistics are accurate in that they trace back to the last IP address from which the attack was launched, the origin may not be the attackers' own system.

Systems engineer director for Symantec Asia Pacific, Tim Hartman, says he believes a lot of the recorded hacker activity has emanated from overseas, using Australia as its launch point.

"The most likely cause [for the rise in Australian hacker activity] is that the computers infected in Australia are staging points for other hackers overseas," said Hartman, adding that the main problem with viruses in Australia is that users are not bothering to protect against them.

"People in Australia haven't been diligent in installing patches or using anti-virus protection, we think there are many un-patched machines out there that aren't being looked after by their users" Hartman said.

Australia's proportion of hacker activity is 3 percent of the total amount, paling in comparison to the United States (US), which claims the lions' share at 58 percent.

The report states the US has dominated over the two previous six-month periods as having the highest percent of hacker activity. However, the country rates fourth in hacker activity per Internet capita statistics.

According to Symantec, the US has one of the highest Internet populations, thus accounting for its dominant position in overall attack rates, yet the country is superseded by Canada, Kuwait and Ireland in number of attacks per 100,000 users.

Australia ranks 10th in the attacks per Internet capita statistics, with an average of 4,251 attacks estimated per 100,000 users.

Hartman says potential hacker activity, such as network "scanning" for system vulnerabilities is significantly increased during school holidays, suggesting that Australia can expect a lot more hacker activity with the maturing of the next generation.

"The whole world can expect more hackers in the future, it's the natural organic growth of the industry," said Hartman, explaining that as technology gets better, so do the hackers.

The results of the report also indicate that most hacking systems favour targets within the same geographic locations as their launch origin, with the exception of South Korea; which was the only country in the top ten ranks to prefer overseas attacks, favouring Australian and North American targets above its own region.

Hartman says the geographic locality is the most probable reason for the South Korea's focus on Australia. He adds that the most popular avenues for attack in Australia are home computer users and small to medium business systems.

"Larger companies usually have IT departments to manage virus attacks, but the small to medium size business just install an anti-virus {product] and think they can let it go at that, making them an easy target," said Hartman.

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Talkback 8 comments

    Australian hackers write some ...Anonymous -- 16/03/04

    Australian hackers write some of the best open source software in the world, surely you meant crackers in this article

    Sometimes it feels like talkin ...Anonymous -- 17/03/04

    Sometimes it feels like talking to a brick wall, but it must be said: hackers ARE NOT crackers. A hacker is a programmer; he makes things. A cracker breaks them. The title of this article should read "Australian cracker activity on the rise".

    This is Not the Whole Truth As ...Anonymous -- 19/03/04

    This is Not the Whole Truth

    As a avid security fan and firewall user, I reject these claims. My ZoneAlarm logs show origins of footprinting activity 90% of the time
    comming from overseas. The DNS records of these
    systems are recorded in the logs and ping as domains from outside of Australia.

    Whils I have seen several attemps launched from within Australia at footprinting both mine and other peoples systems it is very rare indeed to see it come from within Australia.

    Australian Hacking Group Netwo ...Anonymous -- 04/08/04

    Australian Hacking Group NetworkPunk.com is back online. Could this be the reason we are seeing so many more hacks?

    <b>Jack</b>

    It only seems that way because ...Anonymous -- 17/08/04

    It only seems that way because there are more young newblettes around to get caught. Australia has always had a strong foothold in the world of cyber-curiosity and I would place it second to the US (let's face it, they have the population for numeric weighting).

    Salim Apu Babadajala, my frien ...Anonymous -- 17/08/04

    Salim Apu Babadajala, my friend, I hope you read this. The term 'hacker' has been stereotyped to what you fondly refer to as a 'cracker' by the media for thirty years. Get over it, most 'hacker/crackers' have. Actually, if you wanted to be anal retentive, 'cracker' applies to someone who cracks codes / passwords to access something.

    Symantec, We Are Family. Anonymous -- 01/07/07

    Security Experts Need Hackers As Much As Hackers Need Security Experts. We Need Them And They Need Us. We're Family. Its Been That Way Since The Days Of The Mentor And Phrack Magazine. I Feel Troubled By The New Generation Of Hackers/Crackers/Phreaks, They Are All Too Malicious. A Hacker Has a Code Of Ethics. I Remind You Of The Article Written In 1986 Called 'The Manifesto.' "Yes, I Am A Criminal, My Crime Is That Of Curiosity."
    That Comment Right There Sums Up What We Stand For And What These New Age Hackers Need To Learn. Although Im Still Young Myself, I Follow The Ethos And Understand It As Much As An Aged Hacker Might.

    Riiiight anonymous -- 28/03/08 (in reply to #320081985)

    Yes...we've all read the manifesto. Yes the ones that said "this should be cracking not hacking" are right. If you want hacking, get a lifetime subscription to 2600!

    And the comment about 'more hackers due to school holiday port scanning'....what drugs are you on Symantec?! These types of port scanning, script running, can't think for myself, children will grow tired of trying to crack a system and either a) grow up and learn about technology and how to protect themselves and others, and maybe contribute to society with something constructive instead of destructive, or b) forget about it because it's all too hard and live their lives committing 50% to everything they do.

    This rubbish that's published about "hackers' is exactly why the media (or anyone) shouldn't comment on subjects they don't understand. I was going to say "i expected better, coming from Symantec" but let's face it.....it's Symantec.......

    -route

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