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malwareworld
Advanced tools
System based on +500 blacklists and 5 external intelligences to detect internet potencially malicious hosts
A system based on +500 blacklists and 5 external intelligences to detect potentially malicious hosts on the internet.
The tool parses more than 500 public blacklists around the internet in order to identify potencially malicious devices.
Among the final blacklist created merging all the others you can find ips, domains and urls that potencially:
All blacklists used to create a single and huge blacklist can be seen here.
When you require
the blacklist it will start accessing and loading all the blacklists. This process could take from 5 to 10 minutes.
The "database" will be a javascript huge dictionary in memmory. Each component will be and IP or Domain or IPRange potencially malicios that will have as atributes:
Besides, the API of 5 external intelligences are used to check single IPs or domains not only against the huge database of hosts blacklisted but also against the intelligences. If the ip or domain has something suspicious it will be discovered.
malicious_comp = "IP/DOMAIN/RANGE": {
title: "",
type: [],
urls: [],
location : {lat: "", lng: ""},
references: []
}
It has been added some whitelisting so very used and common domains are whitelisted. Please, before deciding that a domain is malicious, check if it has been categorized as "Whitelist".
Please visit MalwareWorld to access to the main page of MalwareWolrd where you can check if a domain or IP is suspicious.
You can found some maps where some malicious IPs detected are represented (It is recommended to use Chrome):
By default, when you check if an IP, Domain or Url is malicious it will be checked agaist the database created merging all the blacklists and against the activated extrnal inteligences. The external intelligences are:
By default, only the intelligences that don't require credentials to be used are activated. These are: Fortiguard and Spamcop.
If you want to deactivate Fortiguard or Spamcop, use:
mw.deactivateFortiguard()
mw.deactivateSpamcop()
In order to activate the other intelligences you have to set the credentials:
Activate Fraudguard:
mw.setFraudguardUser("<YOUR USERNAME>");
mw.setFraudguardPass("<YOUR PASSWORD>");
Activate ProjecHoneypot:
mw.setProjecthoneypotKey("<YOUR API KEY>");
Activate WOT:
mw.setWOTKey("<YOUR WOT API KEY>")
If you only want the huge blacklist that MalwareWorld creates you can access to:
npm install malwareworld
The library has been made to be as simple as possible to use. Once the library has had time to load all the blacklists:
const mw = require('malwareworld')
You can check if an IP, Domain or URL is malicious just calling:
mw.isMalicious(<INPUT>)
> mw.isMalicious("70.32.94.216").then(function(result){
console.log(result);
}, function(err) {
console.log(err);
});
// Result:
{ malicious: true,
'70.32.94.216':
{ title: 'honeypot_tracker/Malicious Host/Spammer',
type: [ 'Bad Reputation', 'Spammer' ],
urls: [],
location: { lat: 34.0202, lng: -118.3928 },
references:
[ 'https://fraudguard.io/',
'https://fortiguard.com/search?q=70.32.94.216&engine=8',
'https://www.spamcop.net/w3m?action=checkblock&ip=70.32.94.216' ]
}
}
By default this method will check the INPUT against the database created using all the blacklists and against the activated external intelligeces.
If you don't want to create the database using the blacklists you can do:
mw.deactivateBlacklists()
You can get all the potencially malicious domains of the database with their descriptions calling:
mw.getMalDomainsList()
You can get all the potencially malicious IPs of the database with their descriptions calling:
mw.getMalIpsList()
You can get all the potencially malicious IP Ranges of the database with their descriptions calling:
mw.getMalRangesList()
You can get all the hosts of type of the database with their descriptions calling:
mw.getMalHostsOf(TYPE)
Types: BadReputation, Malware, KnownAttacker, Spammer, Phishing, CryptoCurrencies, Hidesource, Adware, DGA
You can get all the blacklist that does not respond calling:
mw.getNotRespondingLists()
You can get general statistics of the status of the database and the blacklists by calling:
> mw.getGeneralStatistics()
{ num_ips: 165117, // Number of unique malicious IPs found
num_domains: 118664, // Number of unique malicious Domains found
num_ranges: 46089, // Number of unique malicious IP Ranges found
num_blacklists: 522, // Number of blacklists used
num_notResponding_blacklists: 0, // Number of blacklists not loaded
total_unique: 329870, // Number of unique malicious hosts
repeated: 116451, // Number of repetitions found between balcklists
external_sources: // Check if the external sources are being used or not
{ fraudguard: false,
fortiguard: true,
projecthoneypot: false,
simplespamcop: true,
wot: false }
}
You can access how much potencially malicious hosts were contained in each blacklist used and the sha1 of the response body by calling:
mw.getStatistics()
You can reload all the blacklists calling:
mw.renewAllData()
You can reload all the not responding blacklists calling:
mw.renewNotRespondingData()
You can set an interval to reload every blacklists calling:
mw.renewtAllDataInterval(MINUTES)
You can set an interval to reload every not responding blacklists calling:
mw.renewNotRespondingDataInterval(MINUTES)
You can set the isMalicious()
function to listen in a port calling:
mw.listenInPort(PORT)
const mw = require('malwareworld');
mw.setFraudguardUser("<YOUR USERNAME>");
mw.setFraudguardPass("<YOUR PASSWORD>");
mw.setProjecthoneypotKey("<YOUR API KEY>");
mw.setWOTKey("<YOUR API KEY>");
var day = 24**60;
var hour1 = 1**60;
mw.renewtAllDataInterval(day); // Reload the blacklists every day
mw.renewNotRespondingData(hour1); // Try to load the not responding blacklists every hour
mw.listenInPort(9999); // Expose the isMalicious() funtion in port 9999
mw.isMalicious("malwareworld.com").then(function(result){ // Check if the domain malwareworld.com is malicious (No, it isn't)
console.log(result);
}, function(err) {
console.log(err);
});
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Carlos Polop
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
PLEASE, NOTICE THAT IF YOU ARE PLANNING TO USE THE DATABASE CREATED BY THIS SOFTWARE WITH COMMERCIAL PURPOSES YOU SHOULD CHECK THE LICENSE ASSOCIATE WITH EACH BLACKLIST THAT THIS SOFTWARE USES.
FAQs
System based on +500 blacklists and 5 external intelligences to detect internet potencially malicious hosts
The npm package malwareworld receives a total of 2 weekly downloads. As such, malwareworld popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that malwareworld demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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