91.580.203 computer & network forensics
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91.580.203 Computer & Network Forensics. Xinwen Fu Chapter 13 E-mail Investigations. Outline. Introduction to Email investigation Trace email senders. Email. E-mail Crimes and Violations. Spam emails Becoming commonplace - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
91.580.203 Computer & Network
Forensics
Xinwen Fu
Chapter 13E-mail Investigations
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Outline Introduction to Email investigation Trace email senders
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E-mail Crimes and Violations Spam emails
Becoming commonplace Legal or not depends on the city, state, or
country and always consult with an attorney Crimes involving e-mails:
Narcotic trafficking Extortion Sexual harassment
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Investigating E-mail Crimes and Violations Similar to other types of investigations Goals
Find who is behind the crime Collect the evidence Present your findings Build a case
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Examining E-mail Messages Access victim’s computer and retrieve
evidence Investigate the victim’s e-mail
Find and copy evidence in the e-mail Access protected or encrypted material Print e-mails Open and copy e-mail including headers
Sometimes you will deal with deleted e-mails
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Outline Introduction to Email investigation Trace email senders
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Tracing Normal Emails Name conventions
Corporate: [email protected] Everything after @ belongs to the domain
name Tracing corporate e-mails is easier
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Tracing Emails from Public Email Servers Can you send seemingly anonymous
emails from public email accounts such as Yahoo, Hotmail, etc.? Public: [email protected]
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Tracing by Viewing E-mail Headers Learn how to find e-mail headers
GUI clients Command-line clients Web-based clients
Headers contain useful information Unique identifying numbers Sending time IP address of sending email server IP address of the email client
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SMTP (simple mail transfer protocol) The current SMTP header is put to the head of an email The first “received: from” of an email header identifies the
closest hop to the sender
smtp server 1
smtp server 2
smtp server 3
serv
er 1
serv
er 2
serv
er 3
From
B
ob
To A
lice
Bob Alice
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1. From [email protected] Wed Sep 14 13:30:34 20052. Received: from smtp-relay.tamu.edu (smtp-relay.tamu.edu [165.91.143.199])3. by pine.cs.tamu.edu (8.12.9/8.12.9) with ESMTP id j8EIUUSt013552;4. Wed, 14 Sep 2005 13:30:30 -0500 (CDT)5. Received: from hotmail.com (bay22-f12.bay22.hotmail.com [64.4.16.62])6. by smtp-relay.tamu.edu (8.13.3/8.13.3/oc) with ESMTP id j8EIUa3V052539;7. Wed, 14 Sep 2005 13:30:37 -0500 (CDT)8. (envelope-from [email protected])9. Received: from mail pickup service by hotmail.com with Microsoft SMTPSVC;10. Wed, 14 Sep 2005 11:30:22 -070011. Message-ID: <[email protected]>12. Received: from 212.100.250.207 by by22fd.bay22.hotmail.msn.com with HTTP;13. Wed, 14 Sep 2005 18:30:22 GMT14. X-Originating-IP: [212.100.250.207]15. X-Originating-Email: [[email protected]]16. X-Sender: [email protected]. From: "Doris Benson" [email protected]. Bcc:19. Subject: REPLY NEEDED20. Date: Wed, 14 Sep 2005 14:30:22 -0400
Trace back to a naive spammer
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Standard intelligence collecting techniques Whois – databases with a compilation of information
designed to maintain contact information for network resources
Name service based whois Information about a domain Example: whois uml.edu
or http://www.whois.sc/
Network service based whois Information about network management data
Boundary of a network Example: whois -h whois.arin.net 66.38.151.10 (ARIN -
American Registry for Internet Numbers, http://ws.arin.net/whois)
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Domain name system (DNS) DNS: mapping between numeric ip
addresses and names dig
Get domain name ip and nameserversdig www.uml.edu
SERVER: 129.63.16.100#53(129.63.16.100) For query Mail Servers (port 25) in domain
dig www.uml.edu MX Nslookup – same as dig but obsolete
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Google Email Header (Cont.)
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Google Email Header (Cont.)
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Yahoo Email Header
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Yahoo Email Header (Cont.)
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Hotmail Email Header
then
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Hotmail Email Header (Cont.) then
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Hotmail Email Header (Cont.) Now
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Hotmail Email Header (Cont.) View E-mail Message Source
Every email sent directly from a Hotmail account or other special mail server contains the "X-originating-IP" or "X-Sender-Ip" in the message headers. This number indicates the IP address (or the specific computer ID) the person was using at the time they sent the email
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Thunderbird Email Header
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Once you identify the IP address … To find the suspect, you may have to
check a lot of computer logs to identify the suspect
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Using Specialized E-mail Forensics Tools
Tools AccessData’s FTK EnCase FINALeMAIL Sawmill-GroupWise DBXtract MailBag Assistant Paraben
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Reference jmates, E-Mail Flow, 2006/02/06,
http://sial.org/howto/sendmail/ Configuring DNS, 2006,
http://www.linuxhomenetworking.com/linux-hn/dns-static.htm
Mark D. Roth, sendmail Tutorial, 2006, http://www.feep.net/sendmail/tutorial/