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Possible Smurf attack initiated

advICE :Intrusions : 2000103
 FAQ
Oh my gosh, I'm being HACKED!!!
How do I report the hacker to my ISP?
I'm seeing lots of attacks, is this normal?
Summary

Possible Smurf-amplifier attempt; an ICMP echo frame has been sent to a subnet address (x.x.x.0 or x.x.x.255). This may cause a flurry of echo responses, which can overwhelm the network or the systems involved.

Details

A "smurf attack" uses "IP spoofing" in order to broadcast pings to an "amplifier" in order to overwhelm the victim with responses. This is an attempt to use your network as a "smurf amplifier". For example, somebody on a cable-modem segment can send out a broadcast ping to his/her neighbors while spoofing the IP address of a victim. All the neighbors will respond to that victim, overloading the victim's link. In other words, it only costs the attacker one packet to cause thousands of packets to be sent to the victim. See smurf for more information.

False Positives

This is sometimes triggered by people sending out broadcasts on the local segment. This is commonly seen by people inside corporate networks or on cable-modem segments. While this doesn't indicate an attempt to use your network as an amplifier, it does indicate that somebody is attempting discovery operations on your network.

Defense

See smurf amplifier defense.

 more information
CERT: CA-98.01.smurf   "smurf" IP Denial-of-Service Attacks
 
advICE: smurf  
 
CVE-1999-0513   smurf
 

 configuration for this item
subnet.mask255.255.255.0The subnet mask used when checking an IP address for a Smurf attack.

 
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