Odd DNS Resolution for Google via OpenDNS
We had a report from one of our readers (Deoscoidy) from Puerto Rico had issues reading Google earlier today. Instead of being directed to Google, he got redirected to an error page hosted with the free web service provider atspace.com. Pages like this are known to be used for malware. Shortly after he reported it, the problem fixed itself for him. I have only been able to reproduce part of the problem so far.
He found out that the redirect was in part due to the name resolution done by OpenDNS. It looks like as an OpenDNS user you receive a different response for "www.google.com" vs. resolving it directly:
With OpenDNS (dig @208.67.222.222 www.google.com)
;; ANSWER SECTION:
www.google.com. 30 IN CNAME google.navigation.opendns.com.
google.navigation.opendns.com. 30 IN A 208.69.32.231
google.navigation.opendns.com. 30 IN A 208.69.32.230
Without OpenDNS (dig www.google.com)
;; ANSWER SECTION:
www.google.com. 336708 IN CNAME www.l.google.com.
www.l.google.com. 148 IN A 74.125.93.104
www.l.google.com. 148 IN A 74.125.93.147
www.l.google.com. 148 IN A 74.125.93.99
www.l.google.com. 148 IN A 74.125.93.103
208.69.32.0/21 is owned by OpenDNS. So the information returned by OpenDNS is not necessarily malicious, and may just be part of Googles intricate load balancing scheme (you will likely get very different IP addresses if you run the second query).
The response returned from these servers looks like an authentic response from Google. However, maybe some of the country level redirection had been broken earlier. Right now, everything seems to be fine. If you experience similar issues, please let us know.
Update
Chris and Nicholas confirm that OpenDNS has been doing this "MiM" on Google for a while now. A user may disable this "feature", but will lose the malware protection provided by OpenDNS as a result.
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Johannes B. Ullrich, Ph.D.
SANS Technology Institute Twitter: johullrich
Network Monitoring and Threat Detection In-Depth | Singapore | Nov 18th - Nov 23rd 2024 |
Comments
However, the fake Google DNS records and 'OpenDNS proxy' are a well-documented part of the OpenDNS service, since 2007, see:
http://www.opendns.com/support/article/244
http://blog.opendns.com/2007/05/22/opendns-proxy-faq
Mysidia
Apr 27th 2009
1 decade ago
Puerto Rico sites redirected in DNS attack
news.cnet.com/8301-1009_3-10228436-83.html
Deoscoidy
Apr 30th 2009
1 decade ago