I scanned all my broadband peers.
Hold onto your internet connection because things are about to get interesting! I recently went on a scanning spree, unveiling the mysteries of my broadband peers and the results? Mind-blowing! 📡🔍 Ready to dive into the fascinating world of broadband revelations? Let’s roll! 🚀💻
My internet broadband provider is one of the popular Internet service providers in this region. I have been their customer for quite some time now. Though comments and reviews may point otherwise, I am satisfied by their service in my region with close to promised speeds mostly.
They use NAT and provide static IPs under the 10.0.0.0/8
private block, and if I am not wrong, this same subdomain is used in West Bengal's operational area. As of this moment, they don’t block any cross-customer communication. This makes it possible to scan the entire network. And as I have mentioned later, this may be a security concern.
The masscan configuration used for the scan was:
masscan 10.0.0.0/8 -p80,23,443,21,22,25,3389,110,445,139,143,53,135,3306,8080,1723,111,995,993,5900,1025,587,8888,199,1720,465,548,113,81,6001,10000,514 -Pn -n — rate=1000 -oL 10.masscan
This ensures the following:
- Masscan helps find open IP:Port pairs faster
- Scan the top few TCP ports (32 in this case)
- Keep the scan slow, so it doesn’t cause any network issues, and I don’t wake up anyone at the ISP.
Below, I have mentioned some interesting facts on this scan and related work.
- Out of the ports mentioned, the distribution of count vs port number was
Port count
80 194
443 138
22 75
23 59
8888 15
8080 10
135 9
81 3
5900 2
3389 1
(excluding port 25 & 53)
- A lot of routers
- Quite fewer Ip cameras
- And other login pages of things I don’t know about
Takeaways
Vendors providing these routers & IP cameras should prompt the users to change the default password upon 1st login. A good number of people never care to change the default passwords of these devices after working installation. At the same time, default settings for these devices should restrict access to a select few IPs to prevent unauthorized access over the WAN.
IP cameras should particularly actively provide patches to discovered vulnerabilities and prompt users to update their devices for the same. These vulnerabilities are regularly detected and patched, but it does take time for these consumer devices to get patched.
Network operators should actively block cross-customer communication because consumers usually don’t care or don’t have the knowledge to be safe against it. Therefore some responsibility should be borned by the ISPs.
Actions
I have raised a service ticket and mailed them explaining the issue. The support representative has promised to forward this to the senior authority.
Inspiration
The following blog by captnemo was the inspiration for this blog: