Content area

Abstract

Networks not employing destination-side source address validation (DSAV) expose themselves to a class of pernicious attacks which could be prevented by filtering inbound traffic purporting to originate from within the network. In this work, we survey the pervasiveness of networks vulnerable to infiltration using spoofed addresses internal to the network. We issue recursive Domain Name System (DNS) queries to a large set of known DNS servers world-wide using various spoofed-source addresses. In late 2019, we found that 49% of the autonomous systems we tested lacked DSAV. After a large-scale notification campaign run in late 2020, we repeated our measurements in early 2021 and found that 44% of ASes lacked DSAV--though importantly, as this is an observational study, we cannot conclude causality. As case studies illustrating the dangers of a lack of DSAV, we measure susceptibility of DNS resolvers to cache poisoning attacks and the NXNS attack, two attacks whose attack surface is significantly reduced when DSAV in place. We discover 309K resolvers vulnerable to the NXNS attack and 4K resolvers vulnerable to cache poisoning attacks, 70% and 59% of which would have been protected had DSAV been in place.

Details

Title
Beware of IPs in Sheep's Clothing: Measurement and Disclosure of IP Spoofing Vulnerabilities
Author
Hilton, Alden Douglas
Publication year
2021
Publisher
ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
ISBN
9798762120265
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2617309962
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.