Transcript Slide 1

Computer Forensics
BACS 371
Hiding Data in “Plain Sight”
Ways of Hiding Information
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Rename the File
Make the Information Invisible
Use Windows to Hide Files
Protect the File with a Password
Encrypt the File
Use Steganography
Compress the File
Hide the Hardware
Use Application programs
Rename the File
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If you change the file suffix to a different one, then
the standard Windows applications will not “see” it.
This is not a particularly effective way to hide data
since the file will still run the application if you
double-click on it.
This happens because there is an internal file
signature that tells Windows which application to
run.
Changing the external name does not affect this.
Use Windows to hide files
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You can set a property on a file to make it “hidden”.
If you set a folder view options to not show hidden files,
they become invisible.
Windows also automatically hides files with particular
suffixes from being seen in the directory window.
The most common hidden type is .sys
If you name a file with a .sys suffix and then change the
folder view options to not show hidden system files, they
will also disappear.
Both of these methods are easy to overcome.
Use a Password
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You can hide the contents of a file with a password.
On older versions of Windows this was not
particularly effective.
More recent versions are significantly more robust.
While the passwords can be broken, it is not a trival
task.
Basic Approaches to Password Cracking
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Illegal Methods
 Social
Engineering
 Pretexting
 Phishing
 Login spoofing
 Keystroke logging
 Shoulder surfing
 Dumpster diving
 Security System Attacks
Basic Approaches to Password Cracking
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Ask!
Interview/Interrogation
 Social Engineering
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Plain sight
Post-It Notes
 Documents
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Guess
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Social Engineering
Weak Encryption
Dictionary Attack
Brute Force Attack
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Guessing
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Not surprisingly, many users choose weak passwords, usually one related to themselves in some way.
Repeated research over some 40 years has demonstrated that around 40% of user-chosen passwords
are readily guessable by programs. Examples of insecure choices include:
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blank (none)
the word "password", "passcode", "admin" and their derivates
the user's name or login name
the name of their significant other or another relative
their birthplace or date of birth
a pet's name
automobile licence plate number
a simple modification of one of the preceding, such as suffixing a digit or reversing the order of the letters.
a row of letters from a standard keyboard layout (eg, the qwerty keyboard -- qwerty itself, asdf, or qwertyuiop)
and so on.
Some users even neglect to change the default password that came with their account on the
computer system. And some administrators neglect to change default account passwords provided by
the operating system vendor or hardware supplier. A famous example is the use of FieldService as a
user name with Guest as the password. If not changed at system configuration time, anyone familiar
with such systems will have 'cracked' an important password; such service accounts often have higher
access privileges than a normal user account.
The determined cracker can easily develop a computer program that accepts personal information
about the user being attacked and generates common variations for passwords suggested by that
information.
1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Password_cracking
Encrypt the File
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This is the next level up from using a password.
It basically scrambles the bits of the file in a
systematic way so that, with the proper key, it can
be unscrambled.
Typically, any file with a password is also
encrypted.
High level encryption can be extremely difficult to
“crack” even with vast computer resources.
Use Steganography
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This is a method where one file is embedded into
the bits that make up another file.
Like encryption, it depends upon a password and a
decoding algorithm to recover the original hidden
data.
This can be particularly hard to uncover because
text messages can be hidden in seemingly innocuous
images or sound files.
Compress the file
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This method is not particularly effective.
Most modern operating systems have built-in
programs to compress and decompress files and
folders.
Previously, this was not true, so a compressed file
was as unreadable as an encrypted one.
Hide the Hardware
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The computer settings can be manipulated so that
specific hardware devices are invisible.
A close examination of the actual machine can
quickly find this situation and the hardware can be
made visible again.
Less obvious forms of this are to hide segments of a
disk drive so that portions of the physical drive are
not “counted” even by low-level disk partition tools.
Use Application Programs
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You can hide data in application programs in
various ways.
Word, for example, has several hiding places that
can be used.
Likewise, webpages can hide a good deal of
information in the code or in invisible text.
Methods for Hiding Data in Word Docs
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Font Size
Font Color
Hidden Text
Comments
Track Changes
Meta Data (File Properties)
Author
 Organization
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Versions
Fast Saves
Methods for Uncovering Data in Word Docs
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Select All -> Font
 Black
on white
 Font Size
 Font Type
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Read as Text
Forensic tools (Hex Editor)