[84531] in North American Network Operators' Group

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Re: commonly blocked ISP ports

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Luke Parrish)
Wed Sep 14 16:49:13 2005

Date: Wed, 14 Sep 2005 15:41:31 -0500
To: Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu
From: Luke Parrish <lukep@centurytel.net>
Cc: nanog@merit.edu
In-Reply-To: <200509142012.j8EKCJUV024348@turing-police.cc.vt.edu>
Errors-To: owner-nanog@merit.edu


Not quite looking for tips to manage my network and ACL's or if should or 
should not be blocking, more looking for actual ports that other ISP's are 
blocking and why.

For example:

port 5 worm 2.5
port 67 virus 8.2



At 03:12 PM 9/14/2005, Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu wrote:
>On Wed, 14 Sep 2005 14:42:56 CDT, Luke Parrish said:
> > We have a list, some reactive and some proactive, however we need to 
> remove
> > ports that are no longer a threat and add new ones as they are published.
>
>All ports that are open are threats, at least potentially.  What you *should*
>be doing is:
>
>a) When you block a new port due to a current exploit, log the fact.
>b) Work with customers/users to make sure they're patched, and that new 
>machines
>are patched before they go live.
>c) When probing for the port stops (which it never does), or some sufficient
>number of downstream boxes are patched and safe, remove the block.
>
>Either that, or block the world, and open ports on request.
>
>Remember - *you* are the only one on this list who really knows if a given
>port is a threat anymore....
>
>(And that's totally skipping all the noise about corporate firewalls 
>versus ISP
>firewalls and different expectations regarding security/transparency...)

Luke Parrish
Centurytel Internet Operations
318-330-6661


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