Spotting Aggressive Clandestine BotNets


 
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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Spotting Aggressive Clandestine BotNets
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Old 04-09-2017
Spotting Aggressive Clandestine BotNets

Spotting Aggressive Clandestine BotNets

"Yesterday was making a typical “evening run” in cyberspace and noticed a strange pattern, zoomed in, and found a aggressive clandestine “indexing” botnet operating out of a dedicated hosting provider’s datacenter. The feature image in this post shows a screen capture of this visual. I’m finding spotting clandestine botnets easier than before I designed and coded this cyberspace SA visualization tool."

Cyberspace engineers, read the full post here...

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YESTERDAY(1)						      General Commands Manual						      YESTERDAY(1)

NAME
yesterday - print file names from the dump SYNOPSIS
yesterday [ -c ] [ -date ] files ... DESCRIPTION
Yesterday prints the names of the files from the most recent dump. Since dumps are done early in the morning, yesterday's files are really in today's dump. For example, if today is March 17, 1992, yesterday /adm/users prints /n/dump/1992/0317/adm/users In fact, the implementation is to select the most recent dump in the current year, so the dump selected may not be from today. With option -c, yesterday copies the dump file to the current directory. The date option selects other day's dumps, with a format of 2, 4, 6, or 8 digits of the form dd, mmdd, yymmdd, or yyyymmdd. Yesterday does not guarantee that the string it prints represents an existing file. EXAMPLES
Back up to yesterday's MIPS binary of vc: cd /mips/bin yesterday -c vc Temporarily back up to March 1's MIPS C library to see if a program runs correctly when loaded with it: bind `{yesterday -0301 /mips/lib/libc.a} /mips/lib/libc.a rm v.out mk v.out FILES
/n/dump SOURCE
/rc/bin/yesterday SEE ALSO
fs(4) BUGS
It's hard to use this command without singing. YESTERDAY(1)