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Port 1167 Details


known port assignments and vulnerabilities
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Port(s) Protocol Service Details Source
1167 tcp trojans Backdoor.Bandock.A (2007.11.14) - a trojan horse that opens a back door on the compromised computer. The trojan may arrive as a spammed email attachment.

CrazzyNet trojan also uses this port.
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1167 udp,sctp cisco-ipsla Cisco IP SLAs Control Protocol

Phone, conference calling (UDP)

The General Responder implementation in the IP Service Level Agreement (SLA) feature in Cisco IOS 15.2 and IOS XE 3.1.xS through 3.4.xS before 3.4.5S and 3.5.xS through 3.7.xS before 3.7.2S allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (device reload) via crafted (1) IPv4 or (2) IPv6 IP SLA packets on UDP port 1167, aka Bug ID CSCuc72594.
References: [CVE-2013-1148]
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1167 udp phone, conference calling (unofficial) Wikipedia
1167 tcp trojan CrazzyNet Trojans
1167 udp phone conference calling SANS
1167 udp phone conference calling Nmap
1167 tcp,udp cisco-ipsla Cisco IP SLAs Control Protocol, registered 2006-03 IANA
1167 sctp cisco-ipsla Cisco IP SLAs Control Protocol, registered 2006-03 IANA
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Related ports: 1166  

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External Resources
SANS Internet Storm Center: port 1167

Notes:
Port numbers in computer networking represent communication endpoints. Ports are unsigned 16-bit integers (0-65535) that identify a specific process, or network service. IANA is responsible for internet protocol resources, including the registration of commonly used port numbers for well-known internet services.
Well Known Ports: 0 through 1023.
Registered Ports: 1024 through 49151.
Dynamic/Private : 49152 through 65535.

TCP ports use the Transmission Control Protocol, the most commonly used protocol on the Internet and any TCP/IP network. TCP enables two hosts to establish a connection and exchange streams of data. TCP guarantees delivery of data and that packets will be delivered in the same order in which they were sent. Guaranteed communication/delivery is the key difference between TCP and UDP.

UDP ports use the Datagram Protocol. Like TCP, UDP is used in combination with IP (the Internet Protocol) and facilitates the transmission of datagrams from one computer to applications on another computer, but unlike TCP, UDP is connectionless and does not guarantee reliable communication; it's up to the application that received the message to process any errors and verify correct delivery. UDP is often used with time-sensitive applications, such as audio/video streaming and realtime gaming, where dropping some packets is preferable to waiting for delayed data.

When troubleshooting unknown open ports, it is useful to find exactly what services/processes are listening to them. This can be accomplished in both Windows command prompt and Linux variants using the "netstat -aon" command. We also recommend runnig multiple anti-virus/anti-malware scans to rule out the possibility of active malicious software. For more detailed and personalized help please use our forums.

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