| ▲ | lionkor 9 hours ago | |||||||||||||
I'm not who you asked, but essentially, when you write malware that infects someone's PC, that in itself doesn't really help you much. You usually want to get out passwords and other data that you might have stolen. This is where an exfil (exfiltration) route is needed. You could just send the data to a server you own, but you have to make sure that there are fallbacks once that one gets taken down. You also need to ensure that your exfiltration won't be noticed by a firewall and blocked. Hosting a server locally, easily, on the infected PC, that can expose data under a specific address is (to my understanding) the holy grail of exfiltration; you just connect to it and it gives you the data, instead of having to worry much about hosting your own infrastructure. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | ale42 9 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
> Hosting a server locally, easily, on the infected PC, that can expose data under a specific address is (to my understanding) the holy grail of exfiltration; you just connect to it and it gives you the data, instead of having to worry much about hosting your own infrastructure. A permanent SSH connection is not exactly discreet, though... | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | skrebbel 8 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
Thanks! Though the public address is going to be random here so how will the hacker figure out which tunnl.gg subdomain to gobble up? | ||||||||||||||
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