A useful resource in this area is Attrition.org's Web site. Hackers notify this group when they deface a site, and Attrition.org makes a mirror copy of it as a record. This means it has accurate data reflecting trends in this area. . . .
A useful resource in this area is Attrition.org's Web site. Hackers notify this group when they deface a site, and Attrition.org makes a mirror copy of it as a record. This means it has accurate data reflecting trends in this area. And the current trend isn't good. Attrition.org's Web site is seeing about 30 defacements per day, an increase from 13 per day a year ago and two per day two years ago. And it doesn't look like this will improve anytime soon.

To supplement this data from the outside world, we also regularly examine data from our systems to ensure that our defense is properly focused. We have an intrusion-detection sensor outside the firewall that logs many attacks, and we also log a great deal at our firewalls. As an exercise, we recently analyzed a week's worth of data down to the last packet and noticed some remarkable trends. I hadn't looked at this data in detail for some time, and I was startled by what we found.

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