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<b>Entry Date:</b>
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2003-10-03


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<b>URL:</b>
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<a href="http://www.caida.org/publications/papers/2002/codered/">http://www.caida.org/publications/papers/2002/codered/</a>
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<b>Abstract:</b>
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<p>
On July 19, 2001, more than 359,000 computers
connected to the Internet were infected with the Code-Red
(CRv2) worm in less than 14 hours. The cost of this
epidemic, including subsequent strains of Code-Red, is estimated
to be in excess of $2.6 billion. Despite the global
damage caused by this attack, there have been few serious
attempts to characterize the spread of the worm, partly
due to the challenge of collecting global information about
worms. Using a technique that enables global detection of
worm spread, we collected and analyzed data over a period
of 45 days beginning July 2nd, 2001 to determine the characteristics
of the spread of Code-Red throughout the Internet.
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In this paper, we describe the methodology we use to trace
the spread of Code-Red, and then describe the results of our
trace analyses. We first detail the spread of the Code-Red
and CodeRedII worms in terms of infection and deactivation
rates. Even without being optimized for spread of infection,
Code-Red infection rates peaked at over 2,000 hosts per
minute. We then examine the properties of the infected host
population, including geographic location, weekly and diurnal
time effects, top-level domains, and ISPs. We demonstrate
that the worm was an international event, infection activity
exhibited time-of-day effects, and found that, although
most attention focused on large corporations, the Code-Red
worm primarily preyed upon home and small business users.
We also qualified the effects of DHCP on measurements of
infected hosts and determined that IP addresses are not an
accurate measure of the spread of a worm on timescales
longer than 24 hours. Finally, the experience of the Code-Red
worm demonstrates that wide-spread vulnerabilities in
Internet hosts can be exploited quickly and dramatically,
and that techniques other than host patching are required
to mitigate Internet worms.
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