Kali Linux 2019.3 llega con Linux 5.2.9 y nuevas herramientas para comprobar la seguridad de nuestros equipos

Kali Linux 2019.3

Hace unas horas, Offensive Security ha tenido el placer de anunciar Kali Linux 2019.3, la nueva versión de su sistema operativo de “hacking ético”. Tal y como explicaron hace tiempo, a partir de esta entrega, la distribución estará disponible en tres versiones diferentes: Kali Linux Light, Kali Linux Large y Kali Linux. Las diferencias entre las tres versiones las tendremos en el número de herramientas, habiendo las justas en la versión Light, algunas más en la versión Large y el set completo en Kali Linux.

Como hacen muchos desarrolladores al lanzar nuevas versiones de sus distribuciones, Offensive Security ha aprovechado este lanzamiento para actualizar el kernel de Kali Linux, que ahora pasa a ser Linux 5.2.9. La versión más actualizada del núcleo de los sistemas del pingüino es Linux 5.2.11, por lo que la compañía ha incluido casi la última versión disponible.

Kali Linux 2019.3 está en tres versiones diferentes

Otras novedades incluidas en esta versión son:

  • Soporte mejorado para arquitecturas ARM.
  • Nuevos scripts helper que facilitan encontrar información sobre paquetes.
  • Ejecuta automáticamente binarios de Windows con Wine. Lógicamente, solo podrá ejecutar correctamente los que sean perfectamente compatibles con Wine (esto voy a probarlo en una Live Session para calmar mi curiosidad).
  • NetHunter actualizado. Ahora soporta también el LG V20 (edición internacional), Nexus 5X, Nexus 10 y el OnePlus 7 (ahora recomiendan el OnePlus 7 como mejor dispositivo para ejecutar NetHunter).
  • Se ha añadido soporte para el PINEBOOK, la Gateworks Ventana y la Raspberry Pi 4.
  • Mejorado el soporte para la Raspberry Pi Zero W.
  • Nuevos kernels para ODROID-C2 y otros dispositivos Raspberry Pi.

Los usuarios interesados, podéis descargar la nueva versión desde este enlace, en donde encontraréis las tres entregas anteriormente mencionadas en versiones de 32/64bit con entornos gráficos por defecto de Kali, LXDE, MATE, KDE, XFCE, E17 e imágenes para máquinas virtuales VMware y Virtualbox. Algunos entornos gráficos están disponibles solo en 64bit.

Artículo relacionado:
Offensive Security lanza Kali NetHunter App Store, tienda de apps de seguridad para Android


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Samsung presenta el Galaxy A90 5G: la cima de la serie A huele a gama alta

Samsung continúa trabajando en el Galaxy Fold, sin perder de vista sus otros dispositivos. La firma surcoreana lanzó hace semanas el esperado Galaxy Note 10+ y ahora acaba de anunciar de forma oficial el nuevo Galaxy A90 5G, una nueva versión del Galaxy A90 que ya se conocía. Si recientemente mostramos los fondos de pantalla del Galaxy A90 5G, ahora Samsung ha revelado todas las características y especificaciones que logran

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Huawei lanzará al menos dos dispositivos con Android de aquí a final de año, según un comunicado de la firma

Huawei anunció recientemente la fecha y evento de lanzamiento de la nueva serie Mate30, unos dispositivos que han ido ofreciendo detalles a través de las filtraciones, como que llevarán Android, pero no incluirán las apps ni los servicios de Google. La firma china ya cuenta con su propio sistema operativo, HarmonyOS, pero un comunicado ha desvelado que Huawei lanzará al menos dos dispositivos con Android de aquí a final de

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World of Warcraft Classic ya es oficial: celebra su lanzamiento con estos fondos de pantalla tematizados

Año 2004. Posiblemente uno de los años más importantes para los videojuegos. Ese año nació una leyenda: World of Warcraft. Sus creadores, Blizzard, decidieron apostar por un título multijugador para continuar la historia de su exitoso Warcraft III y a pesar de que muchos jugadores criticaron el cambio de estilo y el tener que pagar cada mes para disfrutar de las aventuras de Thrall, Jaina y compañía, el WOW se

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World of Warcraft Classic ya es oficial: celebra su lanzamiento con estos fondos de pantalla tematizados

Año 2004. Posiblemente uno de los años más importantes para los videojuegos. Ese año nació una leyenda: World of Warcraft. Sus creadores, Blizzard, decidieron apostar por un título multijugador para continuar la historia de su exitoso Warcraft III y a pesar de que muchos jugadores criticaron el cambio de estilo y el tener que pagar cada mes para disfrutar de las aventuras de Thrall, Jaina y compañía, el WOW se

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Además del 5G hay otra cosa que nos gusta del nuevo Samsung Galaxy A90 5G: sus fondos de pantalla

Muchos todavía se preguntan si vale la pena a día de hoy, aunque en Samsung parecen tenerlo claro al igual que los chicos de Qualcomm, las redes 5g han llegado para quedarse y apostar por ellas es lo que hay que hacer desde un principio para acelerar su despliegue. Y puestos manos a la obra, desde el gigante coreano han lanzado ya versiones con conectividad 5G de sus últimos buques

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Feds Allege Adconion Employees Hijacked IP Addresses for Spamming

Federal prosecutors in California have filed criminal charges against four employees of Adconion Direct, an email advertising firm, alleging they unlawfully hijacked vast swaths of Internet addresses and used them in large-scale spam campaigns. KrebsOnSecurity has learned that the charges are likely just the opening salvo in a much larger, ongoing federal investigation into the company’s commercial email practices.

Prior to its acquisition, Adconion offered digital advertising solutions to some of the world’s biggest companies, including Adidas, AT&T, Fidelity, Honda, Kohl’s and T-Mobile. Amobee, the Redwood City, Calif. online ad firm that acquired Adconion in 2014, bills itself as the world’s leading independent advertising platform. The CEO of Amobee is Kim Perell, formerly CEO of Adconion.

In October 2018, prosecutors in the Southern District of California named four Adconion employees — Jacob Bychak, Mark ManoogianPetr Pacas, and Mohammed Abdul Qayyum —  in a ten-count indictment on charges of conspiracy, wire fraud, and electronic mail fraud. All four men have pleaded not guilty to the charges, which stem from a grand jury indictment handed down in June 2017.

‘COMPANY A’

The indictment and other court filings in this case refer to the employer of the four men only as “Company A.” However, LinkedIn profiles under the names of three of the accused show they each work(ed) for Adconion and/or Amobee.

Mark Manoogian is an attorney whose LinkedIn profile states that he is director of legal and business affairs at Amobee, and formerly was senior business development manager at Adconion Direct; Bychak is listed as director of operations at Adconion Direct; Quayyum’s LinkedIn page lists him as manager of technical operations at Adconion. A statement of facts filed by the government indicates Petr Pacas was at one point director of operations at Company A (Adconion).

According to the indictment, between December 2010 and September 2014 the defendants engaged in a conspiracy to identify or pay to identify blocks of Internet Protocol (IP) addresses that were registered to others but which were otherwise inactive.

The government alleges the men sent forged letters to an Internet hosting firm claiming they had been authorized by the registrants of the inactive IP addresses to use that space for their own purposes.

“Members of the conspiracy would use the fraudulently acquired IP addresses to send commercial email (‘spam’) messages,” the government charged.

HOSTING IN THE WIND

Prosecutors say the accused were able to spam from the purloined IP address blocks after tricking the owner of Hostwinds, an Oklahoma-based Internet hosting firm, into routing the fraudulently obtained IP addresses on their behalf.

Hostwinds owner Peter Holden was the subject of a 2015 KrebsOnSecurity story titled, “Like Cutting Off a Limb to Save the Body,” which described how he’d initially built a lucrative business catering mainly to spammers, only to later have a change of heart and aggressively work to keep spammers off of his network.

Most of the spammers Hostswinds terminated were sending messages for marketing programs that sign consumers up for various products or services which bill monthly and can be very difficult for consumers to cancel. Others were involved in sending spam to people who’d given away their email addresses and other personal information in response to various “free gift” offers.

That a case of such potential import for the digital marketing industry has escaped any media attention for so long is unusual but not surprising given what’s at stake for the companies involved and for the government’s ongoing investigations.

Adconion’s parent Amobee manages ad campaigns for some of the world’s top brands, and has every reason not to call attention to charges that some of its key employees may have been involved in criminal activity.

Meanwhile, prosecutors are busy following up on evidence supplied by several cooperating witnesses in this and a related grand jury investigation, including a confidential informant who received information from an Adconion employee about the company’s internal operations.

THE BIGGER PICTURE

According to a memo jointly filed by the defendants, “this case spun off from a larger ongoing investigation into the commercial email practices of Company A.” Ironically, this memo appears to be the only one of several dozen documents related to the indictment that mentions Adconion by name (albeit only in a series of footnote references).

Prosecutors allege the four men bought hijacked IP address blocks from another man tied to this case who was charged separately. This individual, Daniel Dye, has a history of working with others to hijack IP addresses for use by spammers.

For many years, Dye was a system administrator for Optinrealbig, a Colorado company that relentlessly pimped all manner of junk email, from mortgage leads and adult-related services to counterfeit products and Viagra.

Optinrealbig’s CEO was the spam king Scott Richter, who later changed the name of the company to Media Breakaway after being successfully sued for spamming by AOL, MicrosoftMySpace, and the New York Attorney General Office, among others. In 2008, this author penned a column for The Washington Post detailing how Media Breakaway had hijacked tens of thousands of IP addresses from a defunct San Francisco company for use in its spamming operations.

Dye has been charged with violations of the CAN-SPAM Act. A review of the documents in his case suggest Dye accepted a guilty plea agreement in connection with the IP address thefts and is cooperating with the government’s ongoing investigation into Adconion’s email marketing practices, although the plea agreement itself remains under seal.

Lawyers for the four defendants in this case have asserted in court filings that the government’s confidential informant is an employee of Spamhaus.org, an organization that many Internet service providers around the world rely upon to help identify and block sources of malware and spam.

Interestingly, in 2014 Spamhaus was sued by Blackstar Media LLC, a bulk email marketing company and subsidiary of Adconion. Blackstar’s owners sued Spamhaus for defamation after Spamhaus included them at the top of its list of the Top 10 world’s worst spammers. Blackstar later dropped the lawsuit and agreed to paid Spamhaus’ legal costs.

Representatives for Spamhaus declined to comment for this story. Responding to questions about the indictment of Adconion employees, Amobee’s parent company SingTel referred comments to Amobee, which issued a brief statement saying, “Amobee has fully cooperated with the government’s investigation of this 2017 matter which pertains to alleged activities that occurred years prior to Amobee’s acquisition of the company.”

ONE OF THE LARGEST SPAMMERS IN HISTORY?

It appears the government has been investigating Adconion’s email practices since at least 2015, and possibly as early as 2013. The very first result in an online search for the words “Adconion” and “spam” returns a Microsoft Powerpoint document that was presented alongside this talk at an ARIN meeting in October 2016. ARIN stands for the American Registry for Internet Numbers, and it handles IP addresses allocations for entities in the United States, Canada and parts of the Caribbean.

As the screenshot above shows, that Powerpoint deck was originally named “Adconion – Arin,” but the file has since been renamed. That is, unless one downloads the file and looks at the metadata attached to it, which shows the original filename and that it was created in 2015 by someone at the U.S. Department of Justice.

Slide #8 in that Powerpoint document references a case example of an unnamed company (again, “Company A”), which the presenter said was “alleged to be one of the largest spammers in history,” that had hijacked “hundreds of thousands of IP addresses.”

A slide from an ARIN presentation in 2016 that referenced Adconion.

There are fewer than four billion IPv4 addresses available for use, but the vast majority of them have already been allocated. In recent years, this global shortage has turned IP addresses into a commodity wherein each IP can fetch between $15-$25 on the open market.

The dearth of available IP addresses has created boom times for those engaged in the acquisition and sale of IP address blocks. It also has emboldened scammers and spammers who specialize in absconding with and spamming from dormant IP address blocks without permission from the rightful owners.

In May, KrebsOnSecurity broke the news that Amir Golestan — the owner of a prominent Charleston, S.C. tech company called Micfo LLC — had been indicted on criminal charges of fraudulently obtaining more than 735,000 IP addresses from ARIN and reselling the space to others.

KrebsOnSecurity has since learned that for several years prior to 2014, Adconion was one of Golestan’s biggest clients. More on that in an upcoming story.

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Olvídate de CamScanner y demás apps de escaneo: así puedes escanear documentos directamente desde Google Drive

100 millones de descargas no te hacen invulnerable. Así le ha pasado a la popular aplicación de escaneos para dispositivos móviles CamScanner, que se ha visto envuelta en una grave polémica estos últimos días llegando incluso a ser retirada de la tienda de aplicaciones de Google. Al parecer, CamScanner alojaba en su interior un troyano llegando a inundar de publicidad los dispositivos que tuvieran instalada esta aplicación. Esto ha provocado

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Cómo han conseguido los hackers acceder a la cuenta de Twitter del mismísimo CEO de la red social

En los tiempos que corren, además de los riesgos habituales a los que nos enfrentamos, lo hacemos a riesgos virtuales. Almacenamos mucha información en la red, y esta es susceptible de ser atacada. Y, pese a que puedas pensar lo contrario, casi nadie está a salvo. De hecho, el propio CEO de Twitter ha sido atacado, y unos hackers han conseguido acceder a su propia cuenta de Twitter, algo curioso

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