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How an unfixed Net glitch could strand you offline

2010-05-09 10:06:50

By PETER SVENSSON, AP Technology Writer Peter Svensson, Ap Technology Writer

Sat May 8, 10:33 am ET

NEW YORK In 1998, a hacker told Congress that he could bring down the

Internet in 30 minutes by exploiting a certain flaw that sometimes caused

online outages by misdirecting data. In 2003, the Bush administration concluded

that fixing this flaw was in the nation's "vital interest."

Fast forward to 2010, and very little has happened to improve the situation.

The flaw still causes outages every year. Although most of the outages are

innocent and fixed quickly, the problem still could be exploited by a hacker to

spy on data traffic or take down websites. Meanwhile, our reliance on the

Internet has only increased. The next outage, accidental or malicious, could

disrupt businesses, the government or anyone who needs the Internet to run

normally.

The outages are caused by the somewhat haphazard way that traffic is passed

between companies that carry Internet data. The outages are called

"hijackings," even though most of them are not caused by criminals bent on

destruction. Instead the outages are a problem borne out of the open nature of

the Internet, a quality that also has stimulated the Net's dazzling growth.

"It's ugly when you look under the cover," says Earl Zmijewski, a general

manager at Renesys Corp., which tracks the performance of Internet data routes.

"It amazes me every day when I get into work and find it's working."

When you send an e-mail, view a Web page or do anything else online, the

information you read and transmit is handed from one carrier of Internet data

to another, sometimes in a long chain. When you log into Facebook, your data

might be handed from your Internet service provider to a company such as Level

3 Communications Inc., which operates a global network of fiber-optic lines

that carry Internet data across long distances. It, in turn, might pass the

data to a carrier that's connected directly to Facebook's server computers.

The crux of the problem is that each carrier along the way figures out how to

route the data based only on what the surrounding carriers in the chain say,

rather than by looking at the whole path. It's as if a driver had to get from

Philadelphia to Pittsburgh without a map, navigating solely by traffic signs he

encountered along the way but the signs weren't put up by a central

authority. If a sign pointed in the wrong direction, that driver would get

lost.

That's essentially what happens when an Internet route gets hijacked. Because

carriers pass information between themselves about where data should go and

this system has no secure, automatic means of verifying that the routing

information is correct data can be routed to some carrier that isn't

expecting the information. The carrier doesn't know what to do with it, and

usually just drops it. It falls into a "black hole."

On April 25, 1997, millions of people in North America lost access to all of

the Internet for about an hour. The hijacking was caused by an employee

misprogramming a router, a computer that directs data traffic, at a small

Internet service provider.

A similar incident happened elsewhere the next year, and the one after that.

Routing errors also blocked Internet access in different parts of the world,

often for millions of people, in 2001, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008 and 2009. Last

month a Chinese Internet service provider halted access from around the world

to a vast number of sites, including Dell.com and CNN.com, for about 20

minutes.

In 2008, Pakistan Telecom tried to comply with a government order to prevent

access to YouTube from the country and intentionally "black-holed" requests for

YouTube videos from Pakistani Internet users. But it also accidentally told the

international carrier upstream from it that "I'm the best route to YouTube, so

send all YouTube traffic to me." The upstream carrier accepted the routing

message, and passed it along to other carriers across the world, which started

sending all requests for YouTube videos to Pakistan Telecom. Soon, even

Internet users in the U.S. were deprived of videos of singing cats and

skateboarding dogs for a few hours.

In 2004, the flaw was put to malicious use when someone got a computer in

Malaysia to tell Internet service providers that it was part of Yahoo Inc. A

flood of spam was sent out, appearing to come from Yahoo.

"Hijacking is very much like identity theft. Someone in the world claims to be

you," said Todd Underwood, who worked for Renesys during the Pakistan Telecom

hijacking. He now works for Google Inc., trying to prevent hijacking of its

websites, which include YouTube.

In 2003, the Bush administration's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board

assembled a "National Strategy to Secure Cyberspace" that concluded that it was

vital to fix the routing system and make sure the "traffic signs" always point

in the right direction.

But unlike Internet bugs that get discovered and fixed relatively quickly, the

routing system has been unreformed for more than a decade. And while there's

some progress being made, there's little industry-wide momentum behind efforts

to introduce a permanent remedy. Data carriers regard the fallibility of the

routing system as the price to be paid for the Internet's open, flexible

structure. The simplicity of the routing system makes it easy for service

providers to connect, a quality that has probably helped the explosive growth

of the Internet.

That growth has also increased the risks exponentially. Fifteen years ago,

maybe 8,000 people in the world had access to computers that use the Border

Gateway Protocol, or BGP, which defines how carriers pass routing information

to each other. Now, Danny McPherson, chief security officer at Arbor Networks,

believes that with the growth of Internet access across the world and the

attendant increase in the number of carriers, that figure is probably closer to

1 million people.

Peiter Zatko, a member of the "hacker think tank" called the L0pht, told

Congress in 1998 that he could use the BGP vulnerability to bring down the

Internet in half an hour. In recent years, Zatko who now works for the

Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has said the exploit

would still work. However, it would likely take a few hours rather than 30

minutes, partly because a greater number of Internet carriers would need to be

hit.

Plenty of solutions have been proposed in the Internet engineering community,

going back as far as 1995. The U.S. government has supported these efforts,

spurred in part by the Bush administration's 2003 strategy statement. That has

resulted in some trials of new technology, but adoption by data carriers still

appears distant. And the federal government doesn't have any direct authority

to force changes.

One reason is that the weaknesses in the system are in the routing between

carriers. It doesn't help if one carrier introduces a new system every one it

connects with has to make the change as well.

"It's kind of everybody's problem, because it impacts the stability of the

Internet, but at the same time it's nobody's problem because nobody owns it,"

says Doug Maughan, who deals with the issue at the Department of Homeland

Security.

The big Internet carriers seem willing to accept the status quo. Spokesmen at

AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc., two of the largest, world-spanning

carriers of Internet traffic, said they were unable to find anyone at their

companies who could discuss the issue of routing reform.

Pieter Poll, the chief technology officer at Qwest Communications International

Inc., says that he would support some simple mechanisms to validate data

routes, but he argues that fundamental reform isn't necessary. Hijackings are

typically corrected quickly enough that they don't pose a major threat, he

argues.

One fix being tested would stop short of making the routing system fully secure

but would at least verify part of it. Yet this system also worries carriers

because they would have to work through a central database.

"My fear is that innovation on the Internet would slow down if there's a need

to go through a central authority," Poll says. "I see little appetite for that

in the industry."

Jeffrey Hunker, a former senior director for critical infrastructure in the

Clinton administration, says he's not surprised that little has happened on the

issue since 2003. He doesn't expect much to happen in the next seven years,

either.

"The only thing that's going to drive adoption is a major incident, which we

haven't had yet," he says. "But there's plenty of evidence out there that a

major incident would be possible."

In the meantime, network administrators deal with hijacking an old-fashioned

way: calling their counterparts close to where the hijacking is happening to

get them to manually change data routes. Because e-mails may not arrive if a

route has been hijacked, the phone is a more reliable option, says Tom Daly,

chief technical officer of Dynamic Network Services Inc., which provides Web

hosting and other Internet services.

"You make some phone calls and hope and pray," Daly says. "That's about it."