thanks for your response, no this was an enterprise router sold to a large transportation co. the actual problem isn’t software, it’s a pin sized microchip installed on a cpu. you can’t “uninstall” it, you can only burn it off, physically.
3945
*add remark: it was likely the voice card that was installed that was generating the odd traffic, i only took a couple of forensic classes but the professors were useless, didn’t actually have real world experience.
Strange, it is simple old model, may be IOS was hacked? It's old thing, I see nothing impossible in existence of known vulnerabilites in that devices. Check CVEs on your IOS version, may be you'll find something.
I opened a tac case, if cisco couldn’t figure it out at an 3rd tier or exec level…i ain’t gonna. pretty sure it was the card. We even had a att / cisco meeting abt it lol.
thanks for your response, no this was an enterprise router sold to a large transportation co. the actual problem isn’t software, it’s a pin sized microchip installed on a cpu. you can’t “uninstall” it, you can only burn it off, physically.
Could you name a router model?
3945 *add remark: it was likely the voice card that was installed that was generating the odd traffic, i only took a couple of forensic classes but the professors were useless, didn’t actually have real world experience.
Strange, it is simple old model, may be IOS was hacked? It's old thing, I see nothing impossible in existence of known vulnerabilites in that devices. Check CVEs on your IOS version, may be you'll find something.
I opened a tac case, if cisco couldn’t figure it out at an 3rd tier or exec level…i ain’t gonna. pretty sure it was the card. We even had a att / cisco meeting abt it lol.