Category Archives: DDoS News

Anonymous Launches DDoS attacks Against Denver Police Website Against Fatal Shooting

Anonymous NWH targets Denver police department domain with DDoS attack to register protest against the fatal shooting of 39-year-old Dion Avila An Anonymous-linked team of attackers called New World Hacking  (NWH)   has conducted a series of powerful distributed denial-of-service ( DDoS ) attacks on Denver city, county and police website earlier today forcing the site to go offline — The reason for targeting the site was last week’s (Tuesday 14th April)   police shooting in which Dion Avila Damon was allegedly killed inside his parked car near the Denver Art Museum. In an exclusive conversation with two of the NWH attackers (Sad Prophet and SinfulHazeCE) behind this attack, HackRead told that: “We see how Denver police don’t care so if they don’t care about killing and innocent; we don’t care about continuous attacks on Denver.” The attackers also hint for a database leak within a week or so depending on the response from Denver police department. However, Fox news reported that Police is investigating an officer-involved in the shooting. Remember, the NWH is the same group who claimed responsibility for shutting down Xbox online service , BBC news servers , HSBC UK’s online banking, the official website for Donald Trump’s election campaign, Salt Lake city Police and airport websites . At the time of publishing this article, the Denver police department website was down. Source: https://www.hackread.com/anonymous-shut-denver-police-website/    

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Anonymous Launches DDoS attacks Against Denver Police Website Against Fatal Shooting

Anonymous whales on Denmark, Iceland with OpKillingBay DDoS

Anti-dolphin-munching mission DDoSed car-maker Nissan A pair of Akamai researchers are warning that entities using the name and iconography of hacker collective Anonymous will soon expand a six-year distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack campaign against Japan to other whale-and-dolphin-eating nations.…

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Anonymous whales on Denmark, Iceland with OpKillingBay DDoS

South Korea no 1 origin point for DDoS attacks

South Korea has taken the top spot as the largest origin point for DDoS attacks in 2016. Imperva documented DDoS attacks coming out of South Korea at a rate nearly triple that of Russia, which came in second. In fact, South Korea attained a proportion of global DDoS responsibility greater than the next three countries combined. DDoS attacks are one of the more popular tools in the hacker’s toolkit. DDoS, or distributed denial of service attacks, work by essentially flooding the target with traffic. Attackers will normally employ botnets to do this, making it seem as though millions of people are all visiting the same site at the exact same second. Though a favourite of hacktivists, the attack is also employed by cyber-criminals, often using it as a smokescreen to distract defenders while stealing information from the parts of networks that are left undefended. The blackmail group DD4BC, for example, would relentlessly DDoS websites until the unfortunate victims coughed up a couple of bitcoins. Ewan Lawson, a Royal United Services Institute fellow and expert in cyber-security, offered insight as to why South Korea might have reached this zenith. Lawson told SCMagazineUK.com , “It feels like it is in part a reflection of the networked nature of [South Korea] but there are other countries with similar degrees of penetration or greater.” South Korea has one of the highest internet penetration rates in the world and also enjoys one of the faster internet speeds, last year rated at an average of 23.6 Mbps. “It would therefore suggest”, said Lawson, “that there is some vulnerability in the gateways and/or servers that are being exploited by the DDoS enabling malware.” Igal Zeifman, senior manager at Imperva, told SC , “As a rule, botnets thrive either in regions with high Internet connectivity or in emerging Internet markets with a high prevalence of unsecured connected devices.” Zeifman added, “South Korea certainly fits the former scenario, with botnet shepherds benefiting from the organic evolution in connection speeds—something that also improves the attacking (upload) capabilities of compromised devices.” Botnets have been growing rapidly in South Korea over the past year. The South Korean DDoS activity primarily comes from two botnets – Nitol and PCRat – both of which offer remote control over the infected devices. Where they differ is their attack traffic signatures, Zeifman told SC. Nitol, for example, is a Chinese botnet and will probably send out attack disguised as search engine crawlers from Baidu, an immensely popular Chinese website. Jarno Limnell, professor of cyber-security at Aalto university in Finland, explained to SC that both of these botnets are Windows based: “A typical ‘member’ of a botnet is, therefore, a Windows PC. The easiest way to do it – non-updated (and possibly illegal) Windows with the appropriate vulnerability. I guess that in South Korea there a lot of these kind of PCs available to build botnets.” Russia and Ukraine came second and third respectively. Though beaten by South Korea, Zeifman told SC that the two countries owe much of their increased activity to “the emergence of new botnets built out of Windows OS devices compromised with the Generic!BT malware”. Zeifman added this may be indicative of poor security in those countries: “The fact that a known, and pretty outdated, type of malware is successfully being used points to inefficient security measures on the part of device owners.” Meanwhile, and perhaps unsurprisingly, the United States was the most DDoSed country in the world over the last quarter, far outpacing the combined total of the other nine most DDoSed countries. Some of the report’s other findings included the fact that DDoS attacks, are “upping their game” when it comes to botnets. Imperva’s report says this, “this was best exemplified by an increase in the number of DDoS bots with an ability to slip through standard security challenges, commonly used to filter out attack traffic.” Over the first quarter of this year, the number of these kinds of bots “mushroomed” from 6.1 percent to 36.6 percent, as a proportion of total bots. What makes them different is that some of these bots can hold cookies while others can spot javascript, making for a deadly combination. DDoS attackers are also narrowing their gazes. Imperva notes that while DDoS attacks may have once been brutish and crude, the company is seeing far more finesse in the deployment. Attackers have been experimenting with new methods and vectors, which the reports says suggests “that more perpetrators are now re-prioritising and crafting attacks to take down DDoS mitigation solutions, rather than just the target.” Source: http://www.scmagazineuk.com/south-korea-no-1-origin-point-for-ddos-attacks/article/491220/

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South Korea no 1 origin point for DDoS attacks

ISPs are putting their enterprise customers at risk of DDoS attacks

The vast majority of enterprise end users (85%) want their ISPs to offer more comprehensive DDoS protection-as-a-service, according to Corero Network Security. The research, which polled over 100 ISPs and 75 enterprise customers about their DDoS mitigation strategies, revealed that an alarming proportion of ISPs are still relying on outdated technologies to protect their customers. For example, forty-six per cent divert DDoS traffic through a scrubbing centre – an expensive and notoriously slow technique which … More ?

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ISPs are putting their enterprise customers at risk of DDoS attacks

Academic network Janet clobbered with DDoS attacks – again

Funny how it always gets targeted at the end of term… Blighty’s government-funded educational network Janet has once again been hit by a cyber attack, with a fresh wave of DDoS attacks launched against the network this morning.…

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Academic network Janet clobbered with DDoS attacks – again

BadLock Opens Door for Samba-based MiTM, DDoS Attacks

Details of a new, high-impact vulnerability known as BadLock have been revealed, affecting Samba, the standard Windows interoperability suite of programs for Linux and Unix. As the researchers who discovered it noted, “we are pretty sure that there will be exploits soon after we publish all relevant information.” Fortunately, patches have been released today, and admins would behoove themselves to update their systems immediately. The vulnerability was discovered by Stefan Metzmacher, a member of the international Samba Core Team, working at SerNet on Samba. He reported the bug to Microsoft and has been working closely with the computing giant to fix the problem. The research team said that the security vulnerabilities can be mostly categorized as man-in-the-middle or denial of service attacks. The several MITM attacks that the flaw enables would permit execution of arbitrary Samba network calls using the context of the intercepted user. So for instance, by intercepting administrator network traffic for the Samba AD server, attackers could view or modify secrets within an AD database, including user password hashes, or shutdown critical services. On a standard Samba server, attackers could modify user permissions on files or directories. As far as DDoS, Samba services are vulnerable to a denial of service from an attacker with remote network connectivity to the Samba service. While there are several proof of concept (PoC) exploits that researchers have developed, they’re not releasing them to the public, nor are they going into detail on what the vulnerability entails or arises from. Red Hat researchers offered a bit more on the flaw: It is “a protocol flaw in the DCE/RPC-based SAMR and LSA protocols used in the Microsoft Windows Active Directory infrastructure. DCE/RPC is the specification for a remote-procedure call mechanism that defines both APIs and an over-the-network protocol. The Security Account Manager (SAM) Remote Protocol (Client-to-Server) provides management functionality for an account store or directory containing users and groups. The protocol exposes the “account database” for both local and remote Microsoft Active Directory domains. The Local Security Authority (Domain Policy) Remote Protocol is used to manage various machine and domain security policies. This protocol, with minor exceptions, enables remote policy-management scenarios. Both SAMR and LSA protocols are based on the DCE 1.1 RPC protocol.” These protocols are typically available to all Windows installations, as well as every Samba server. They are used to maintain the Security Account Manager database, which applies to all roles (for example, standalone, domain controller or domain member). The flaw thus gives attackers a way to insert themselves into that communications chain, and go on to execute a MiTM or DDoS attack. The BadLock researchers announced weeks ago that they would be making this announcement and releasing patches, drawing not a little derision for hyping the situation—especially since they went so far as to develop a logo. But the researchers said that they were simply making use of the hash-taggable name to get people interested, talking about it and ready to patch. “Like Heartbleed, what branded bugs are able to achieve is best said with one word: Awareness,” the researchers noted. “It is a thin line between drawing attention to a severe vulnerability that should be taken seriously and overhyping it. This process didn’t start with the branding—it started a while ago with everyone working on fixes. The main goal of this announcement was to give a heads up. Vendors and distributors of Samba are being informed before a security fix is released in any case. This is part of any Samba security release process.” Source: http://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/badlock-opens-door-for-sambabased/

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BadLock Opens Door for Samba-based MiTM, DDoS Attacks

Man pleads guilty for serving white hat with DoS, swearbot, sex toys

Electronic Tribulation Army has anger management problems Oklahoma man Benjamin Earnest Nichols faces up to 10 years jail in a United States federal prison and a US$250,000 fine after pleading guilty to launching a distributed denial of service attack against security consultancy mccrewsecurity.com .…

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Man pleads guilty for serving white hat with DoS, swearbot, sex toys

DDoS Attacks With BillGates Linux Malware Intensify

XOR botnet authors migrate to using BillGates malware Over the past six months, security researchers from Akamai’s SIRT team have observed a shift in the cyber-criminal underground to using botnets created via the BillGates malware to launch massive 100+ Gbps DDoS attacks. The BillGates malware is a relatively old malware family aimed at Linux machines running in server environments. Its primary purpose is to infect servers, link them together in a botnet controlled via a central C&C server, which instructs bots to launch DDoS attacks at their targets. The malware has been around for some years and due to its (irony-filled) name is probably one of the most well-known Linux-targeting malware families. Former XOR botnet operators reverted to using BillGates A BillGates botnet is capable of launching Layer 3, 4, and 7 DDoS attacks. More accurately it supports ICMP floods, TCP floods, UDP floods, SYN floods, HTTP floods and DNS reflection floods. According to Akamai’s Security Intelligence Research Team (SIRT), ever since the XOR DDoS botnet , also Linux-based, has been neutralized a few months back, hacking outfits have switched to the BillGates botnet for their attacks. While not as powerful as the XOR botnet, which was capable of launching 150+ Gbps attacks, BillGates attacks can go over 100 Gbps when needed. Moreover, as Akamai noticed, the hacking crew that deployed the XOR botnet has also switched to using BillGates malware, the CDN and cyber-security provider seeing DDoS attacks on the very same targets the XOR botnet crew was previously attacking. Most BillGates DDoS attacks targeted Asian online gaming servers DDoS attacks launched with this botnet have were seen  targeting  Asia-based companies and their digital properties, mostly located in online gaming. Besides the original XOR crew, the malware has been used to build different botnet by multiple gangs and has even been used as the base for other Linux-based DDoSing malware. The BillGates malware is available for purchase on underground hacking forums, and it comes in the form of a “malware builder” which allows each crew to generate its own strand, that can run on different C&C servers. Last June , Akamai observed a similar spike in DDoS attacks coming from botnets built with the BillGates malware. Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/ddos-attacks-with-billgates-linux-malware-intensify-502697.shtml

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DDoS Attacks With BillGates Linux Malware Intensify

Ubuntu plugs code exec, DoS Linux kernel holes

This is kind of a big deal because the mess is in 14.04 LTS, expiry date 2019 Ubuntu has patched four Linux kernel vulnerabilities that allowed for arbitrary code execution and denial of service attacjs.…

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Ubuntu plugs code exec, DoS Linux kernel holes