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A certain type of software, known as a port sniffer, can help system administrators discover which services on their corporate network represent a vulnerability through which they might experience an attack on the system. But such software cannot always reveal whether outsiders are probing the system in search of those vulnerable points. To fill that void, Network Flight Record, Inc., headed by Marcus Ranum, has introduced BackOfficer Friendly, a spoofing server service that can tell a company when the corporate network's ports have been scanned by an outsider. It can pretend to be a normal server and respond to requests, while recording the IP address of the intruding system as well as the operations and commands sent. Ranum says the tool is meant as a diagnostic, 'informational' tool, not as a means of providing the proactive safeguards of a firewall. The tool is one of many that have been produced in recent months as a response to such notorious hacker tools as BackOrifice, software that can remotely monitor and operate a computer (see 'Tech Talk' September). It is commonly held that BackOrifice is likely only the tip of the iceberg, that even more dangerous stealth programs are going to be propagated across the Internet.
Tools such as BackOfficer Friendly are increasingly being sought to help corporate security managers determine the extent of the problem and learn how crackers attempt their heists. Another product that performs similar monitoring services is AntiSniff by L0pht Heavy Industries, Inc., a renowned hacker think tank. The company says that the software runs a series of nonintrusive tests to determine whether a remote computer is eavesdropping or whether an intemal user is snooping without authorization. In addition, free tools are offered online by such organizations as the Computer Emergency Response Team at Carnegie Mellon University and the National Institute of Standards and Technology.