Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

antivirus companies consider the service to be a botnet #7

Open
starius opened this issue Jan 29, 2016 · 3 comments
Open

antivirus companies consider the service to be a botnet #7

starius opened this issue Jan 29, 2016 · 3 comments

Comments

@starius
Copy link
Owner

starius commented Jan 29, 2016

Some botnet owners seem to use onion gates like onion.gq to connect infected machines to the master of the botnet which is located in onion. Some other people report this:

That is why my server serving service onion.gq was suspended again yesterday.

Does somebody know abuse resistant ISP to host it?

Another approach I want to try is adding JavaScript puzzle on confirmation page to make it harder to connect from non-browser HTTP agents (like botnet agents).

@starius
Copy link
Owner Author

starius commented Feb 14, 2016

Created new VPS today.

@ghost
Copy link

ghost commented Apr 18, 2017

  1. Why not add an option to deny non-GET request, and use it? If your public service allow POST request, bad people will use your service for C&C server(malware).
  2. For VPS candidate: https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/wiki/doc/GoodBadISPs

@ghost
Copy link

ghost commented Apr 18, 2017

I want to try is adding JavaScript puzzle

And please don't do it. If you're using Tor, you'll notice many Cloudflare websites show captcha instead of content. And many people who use Tor didn't enable Javascript. Take a look at "onion.link". They serve .onion webpage content without Ads nor Captcha.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

1 participant