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CSCD 496 Computer Forensics

Lecture 15 Network Forensics Internet Information - Anonymity Winter 2010. CSCD 496 Computer Forensics. Lecture Outline. Two Main Topics Anonymity Hiding your identity on the Internet E-mail anonymity. Introduction. Internet - huge repository of information

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CSCD 496 Computer Forensics

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  1. Lecture 15 Network Forensics Internet Information - Anonymity Winter 2010 CSCD 496Computer Forensics

  2. Lecture Outline • Two Main Topics • Anonymity • Hiding your identity on the Internet • E-mail anonymity

  3. Introduction • Internet - huge repository of information • A lot of information stored on Internet applications and servers • Today, look at becoming anonymous on the Internet • Look at anonymity servers and remailers • Should have had a chance to try out remailer from the lab

  4. Introduction • Problem with Internet information • Tracing activity to an individual is hard • Why might you want to be anonymous?

  5. Anonymity • Important • Investigators need to know • How to hide themselves on-line • How criminals and others hide themselves on-line • Undercover for gambling, child porn, drugs or stolen merchandise • What do you want to conceal? • Name, address, tel. number, IP address • Lots of ways to do this ...

  6. Free ISPs • Hiding On-line • Free ISPs – dial in without ID • Netzero is one that is free • NetZero launched in 1998, first free internet service provider • Grew to 1,000,000 users in six months • Limited to 10 hours/month • Bought Juno • Another service • http://www.fastfreedialup.com/

  7. Free ISPs • What does that get you? • Use a dial-up modem and provider such as Earthlink, Juno, or NetZero to connect to the Internet • Every time you dial in and connect to the Internet there is a very good chance that your IP address will be different • Calling different access numbers (different cities, different States even) will increase chance of getting a unique IP address

  8. Proxies • Another way to conceal IP while surfing the Web • Direct all page requests through a proxy • Proxy– remote machine connect through to the Net which forwards your IP traffic and makes it look like you are originating from • Web server logs records IP of proxy instead of actual client IP • Not all of them are free • Web proxy sites • http://www.the-cloak.com/anonymous-surfing-home.html • http://anon.inf.tu-dresden.de/ • https://proxy.org/ (a whole bunch at one site)‏

  9. Browser Proxies • Browser proxies • Add-on to your browser allows automated switching according to rules you set • Example: FoxyProxy for Firefox • FoxyProxy Firefox extension automatically switches an internet connection across one or more proxy servers based on URL pattern • FoxyProxy automates manual process of editing Firefox's Connection Settings dialog

  10. Results of Proxies • Proxies • What is accomplished by a proxy? • Hides your IP in Web logs • Makes it more difficult to find originating IP since must go back to proxy server to get IP of suspect • Connect to IRC or ICQ with a proxy • Not all of the ones on previous page allow this • Minimizes cookies and other types of tracking

  11. VPN Connections • How do they work? • Virtual Private Network (VPN) Providers: A VPN special network allows computers to securely and privately access resources through them • Computers configured to use a VPN can forward all traffic through the VPN and obscure their actual IP address • Commercial service will have access to your billing information

  12. Paid VPN's • Several paid services https://www.relakks.com/faq/legal/ • Swedish Broadband service • Really interesting terms of service • Other VPN Services • http://blacklogic.com/ • http://www.piratpartiet.se/international/english • http://www.hotspotvpn.com/

  13. Tests for Your Anonymity • WhatsMyIP http://www.whatsmyip.org/ • Privacy Test http://privacy.net/analyze-your-internet-connection/ • Lagado Test http://www.lagado.com/proxy­test • Zaloop http://zaloop.net

  14. Other Anonymity Services • The Onion Router (TOR)‏ http://www.torproject.org/ • TOR is a global Internet anonymity and privacy system. It utilizes between 800-1500 computers spread across the world to forward Internet traffic anonymously • A user installs TOR and configures their web traffic to move through the TOR network • This makes the user's traffic appear to originate at a random computer on the Internet

  15. Other Anonymity Services • Change your browser habits and an add-on • Stealther 1.0.8 - https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/1306 • Surf the web without leaving a trace in your local computer • What it does is temporarily disable the following: - Browsing History (also in Address bar)‏ - Cookies - Downloaded Files History - Disk Cache - Saved Form Information - Sending of ReferrerHeader - Recently Closed Tabs list

  16. Email Anonymity

  17. E-mail • Every message header contains information about its origin and destination • Possible to track e-mail back to its source • Identify the sender • Even when forged, there is information in e-mail headers

  18. E-mail • E-mail one of the most widely used services on the Internet • Most important ways criminals communicate • For more privacy, encryption is used or anonymous re-mailer • E-mail protected by strict privacy law – Which Law? • Electronic Communication Privacy Act (ECPA)‏ • Even if can obtain incriminating e-mail, difficult to prove specific individual sent a specific message • Claim they never sent it • Look more at anonymizing e-mail next

  19. Anonymous E-mail • There are two kinds of services in this category. • First is truly Anonymous: no one anywhere knows your identity • This is a one-way channel, can’t get return mail sent back to you • Usually encrypted • Typically, sent through more than one remailer • Example: Cypherpunk or Mixmaster

  20. Anonymous E-mail • Second, called Pseudo-anonymous or sometimes Pseudonymous • Owner of the service knows your identity and can be forced in a court of law to reveal it • Most truly anonymous services are free (it's difficult to bill an unknown, unnamed client), but they often require some skill and effort to use • You expect to have your email answered • You get your identify replaced with dummy address • Responses replaced with dummy address too • Example: Craigslist and match.com

  21. Anonymous E-mail • Remailers make it hard to determine who sent a particular message • But no message is totally anonymous • Sender puts txt in the message • Message leaves something behind with sender ID • Machines that handle message may have useful information • Forging and Tracking E-mail • Important to know how e-mail is actually created and transmitted • Understand e-mail headers too

  22. Cipher Punk Example http://anonymous.to/tutorials/anonymous-remailers/ • Steps • Create a message in your email client programs • Put the remailer address in the To: field remailer@cypherpunks.to • Message should have a subject, prior to it a '##' • In the body of the message type '::' • Then, next line, Anon-to: recipient@mail.com • One blank line, then type message • Its that simple!!!

  23. Cipher Punk Remailers • Example To: remailer@cypherpunks.to Subject: Testing anonymous email > Body: > :: > Anon-To: recipient@address.com > > ## > Subject: Subject of message > > Type your message here.

  24. Tracking E-mail • E-mail is like Real mail • Post offices in e-mail world called • Mail Transfer Agents (MTA)‏ • Message may travel through multiple MTA’s • Each MTA adds something to the header of a transmitted message • Time stamps, technical identifying information • Each creates its own received header • Passed along to next MTA until message reaches its destination

  25. Tracking E-mail • Default is not to see the e-mail header • Most e-mail clients have a setting that allows you to view e-mail header • Netscape email • View – Headers – All • Outlook Express • File – properties - click on details • Eudora • Click on blah-blah-blah • Opera • Right click email header, select View all headers

  26. Tracking E-mail • Identity in E-mail • Unless remailer or advanced forging technique used • Sender identity embedded in message • Two most useful header fields: • Message ID • Received field • Message ID • Is globally unique – current date/time, MTA domain name and sender’s account name Example: Message sent Dec. 4, 1999 from mail.corpX.com by user13 Message-id: <user13120499152415 – 00000153@mail.corpX.com>

  27. Tracking E-mail • Examining E-mail Headers • Some might have been forged, but the last few were likely valid, • Since e-mail message was delivered • Can achieve pseudo-anonymity through hotmail or netaddress e-mail account • Header will contain IP of original computer • Unless you went through an anonymizer ...

  28. Return-Path: <ctaylor888@hotmail.com> • Received: from hotmail.com (bay106-f21.bay106.hotmail.com[65.54.161.31])‏ • by granite.cs.uidaho.edu (8.13.3+Sun/8.13.3) with ESMTP id jA7IbwCl018714 • for <ctaylor@cs.uidaho.edu>; Mon, 7 Nov 2005 10:38:04 -0800 (PST)‏ • Received: from mail pickup service by hotmail.com with Microsoft SMTPSVC; • Mon, 7 Nov 2005 10:37:52 -0800 • Message-ID: <BAY106-F215B117D7F1A86414E304889650@phx.gbl> • Received: from 65.54.161.200 by by106fd.bay106.hotmail.msn.com with HTTP; • Mon, 07 Nov 2005 18:37:52 GMT • X-Originating-IP: [129.101.153.145] • X-Originating-Email: [ctaylor888@hotmail.com] • X-Sender: ctaylor888@hotmail.com • From: "Carol Taylor" <ctaylor888@hotmail.com> • To: ctaylor@cs.uidaho.edu • Subject: Sending a message to myself • Date: Mon, 07 Nov 2005 10:37:52 -0800 • Mime-Version: 1.0 • Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed • X-OriginalArrivalTime: 07 Nov 2005 18:37:52.0628 (UTC) FILETIME=[5C97D340:01C5E3CA] • Content-Length: 270 Example: Hot mail

  29. Return-path: anonymousmailer@behidden.com • Received: from imta21.westchester.pa.mail.comcast.net (LHLO • imta21.westchester.pa.mail.comcast.net) (76.96.62.31) by • sz0050.ev.mail.comcast.net with LMTP; Tue, 2 Mar 2010 18:48:42 +0000 (UTC)‏ • Received: from mout.perfora.net ([74.208.4.195]) by • imta21.westchester.pa.mail.comcast.net with comcast Joh1d0194CTZVm0MJohcP; • Tue, 02 Mar 2010 18:48:42 +0000 • . . . • X-Authority-Analysis: v=1.1 • Received: from localhost (u15177982.onlinehome-server.com [82.165.253.19]) by • mrelay.perfora.net (node=mrus4) with ESMTP (Nemesis1NaFSs0bDp-013hVr; Tue, 02 Mar 2010 13:48:40 -0500 • MIME-Version: 1.0 • To: ctaylor4214@comcast.net • From: AnonymousMailer@behidden.com • Subject: Trying beHidden.com • Content-Type: text/plain; charset="ISO-8859-1" • Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit • Message-ID: <0Lrebt-1NaFSs0bDp-013hVr@mrelay.perfora.net> • Date: Tue, 02 Mar 2010 10:48:39 -0800 • X-Provags-ID: V01U2FsdGVkX18zZyGxtJetADPAYPYc8Tl6hLwJECvXwZofTGD yRUgR+qvaXYsRBIFlqS6cVOGnapEF0Ar8AW+hMEGAxQXA8HIi • Trying this service to see what it sends.

  30. Email Anonymity • Hushmail • Another level of anonymity • Wants recepient to log in and get the message • See example

  31. Where Email Comes From • Superficially, it appears that email is passed directly from the sender's machine to the recipient's • Lie. Email passes through at least four computers during its lifetime • Most organizations have a dedicated machine to handle mail, called a "mail server” • When a user sends mail, • She normally composes the message on her own computer, then sends it off to her ISP's mail server • At this point her computer is finished with the job, but the mail server still has to deliver the message • It does this by finding the recipient's mail server, talking to that server and delivering the message

  32. Consider a couple of fictitious users: • rth@bieberdorf.edu and tmh@immense-isp.com • tmh is a dialup user of Immense ISP, Inc., using a mail program called Loris Mail • rth is a faculty member at the Bieberdorf Institute, with a workstation on his desk networked with the Institute's other computers • If rth wants to send a letter to tmh, • Composes it at his workstation alpha.bieberdorf.edu • Text passed to mail server, mail.bieberdorf.edu • Mail server, contacts other mail server mailhost.immense-isp.com • And delivers the mail to it • Message stored on mailhost.immense-isp.com until tmh dials in from his home computer and checks his mail • At that time, the mail server delivers any waiting mail, including the letter from rth, to it.

  33. During all this processing, headers will be added to the message three times: • 1. At composition time, by whatever email program rth is using; • 2. When that program hands control off to mail.bieberdorf.edu • 3. At the transfer from Bieberdorf to Immense. (Normally, the dialup node that retrieves the message doesn't add any headers.) • We can watch the evolution of these headers …

  34. Mail Headers • As generated by rth's mailer and handed off to mail.bieberdorf.edu: • From: rth@bieberdorf.edu (R.T. Hood)To: tmh@immense-isp.comDate: Tue, Mar 18 1997 14:36:14 PSTX-Mailer: Loris v2.32Subject: Lunch today?

  35. EMail Headers • As they are when mail.bieberdorf.edu transmits the message to mailhost.immense-isp.com: Received: from alpha.bieberdorf.edu (alpha.bieberdorf.edu [124.211.3.11]) by mail.bieberdorf.edu (8.8.5) id 004A21; Tue, Mar 18 1997 14:36:17 -0800 (PST)------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ From: rth@bieberdorf.edu (R.T. Hood)To: tmh@immense-isp.comDate: Tue, Mar 18 1997 14:36:14 PSTMessage-Id: <rth031897143614-0000298@mail.bieberdorf.edu>X-Mailer: Loris v2.32Subject: Lunch today? Header added

  36. Email Headers • As they are when mailhost.immense-isp.com finishes processing the message and stores it for tmh to retrieve: Received: from mail.bieberdorf.edu (mail.bieberdorf.edu [124.211.3.78]) by mailhost.immense-isp.com (8.8.5/8.7.2) with ESMTP id LAA20869 for <tmh@immense-isp.com>; Tue, 18 Mar 1997 14:39:24 -0800 (PST) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Received: from alpha.bieberdorf.edu (alpha.bieberdorf.edu [124.211.3.11]) by mail.bieberdorf.edu (8.8.5) id 004A21; Tue, Mar 18 1997 14:36:17 -0800 (PST)From: rth@bieberdorf.edu (R.T. Hood)To: tmh@immense-isp.comDate: Tue, Mar 18 1997 14:36:14 PSTMessage-Id: <rth031897143614-00000298@mail.bieberdorf.edu>X-Mailer: Loris v2.32Subject: Lunch today? This last set of headers is the one that tmh sees on the letter when he downloads and reads his mail. Header added

  37. Conclusion • Internet is a wealth of information sources • E-mail plus other ways to leave information • Useful for identifying criminal activity • Need to know if or how these sources were used in a suspected crime • Anonymity • Used a lot by people who want to hide their activities • Can hide a lot of things, but still some identifying information • Just harder

  38. Resources • Electronic Frontier Foundation http://www.eff.org/ • Privacy Author http://www.andrebacard.com/privacy.html • BeHidden – email and surfing http://www.behidden.com/ • Hushmail http://www.hushmail.com/ • Privacy Test http://privacy.net/analyze-your-internet-connection/ • VPN Encryption Tunnel https://www.relakks.com/faq/legal/

  39. End Next time: Case Study – Digital Evidence Internet Tracking someone via the Internet

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