Category Archives: Security Websies

Why the Internet of Things could lead to the next great wave of DDoS attacks

Businesses should ensure that they are still securely protected against DDoS attacks, despite the recent growth of other trends such as ransomware. That’s the warning from Arbor Networks, which is urging organisations of all sizes to make sure they stay safe online as DDoS attacks are still rife around the world. Speaking to ITProPortal at the recent InfoSecurity Europe 2017 event in London, Arbor CTO Darren Anstee reinforced the need for businesses to maintain their DDoS protection, despite it being hard to predict who might be hit next. “DDoS is all about targeting the availability of those services that modern businesses rely on,” he noted. In order to combat this growing threat, the company recently revealed an updated version of its APS on-premise, distributed DDoS detection and mitigation platform for enterprise customers. The new release includes Arbor’s latest Cloud Signalling tool, which can help reduce the time to attack mitigation, bringing together on-premise and hybrid cloud migration efforts. The Internet of Things is also set to provide a major new threat landscape for DDoS attacks, Arbor Networks believes, with past attacks such as Mirai and Dyn showing the potential for chaos. “There are a lot of IoT DDoS attacks going on out there”,  Anstee says, noting that most people only hear about these assaults when a big brand is affected. Poor regulation of IoT products has not helped with the spread of potential attacks, with many consumers unaware that the items they are buying will pose some kind of security risk. But Anstee says that commercial pressure could instead play a big role in changing the current landscape, as vendors often return to market trends faster than regulatory pressure. “If you want things to change quickly, you have to get people to get security implemented into their buying process,” he notes, adding that it is a “valid worry” that IoT attacks could scale to affect areas such as smart cities and infrastructure networks soon. “We are going to see IoT devices being used for more nefarious purposes over the next few years…I don’t see the problem going away”. As the recent WannaCry ransomware attack showed, however, businesses need to be protected against all kinds of threats. Anstee noted that ransomware should remain a major concern for companies both large and small likely to be targeted. “It’s a numbers game when it comes to ransomware,” he noted, “it is a very broad brush – if just one or two people pay, it makes it all worthwhile.” In order to stay protected, there are several central steps that companies can take, Anstee added. This includes network segmentation, which would allow infections such as WannaCry to be quickly and easily contained. “It’s not a sexy topic, but it needs to happen in many businesses,” he says. “We’ve all focused on agility, and flattening network infrastructure…but this is really important, as it can stop such attacks propagating within networks, if it’s done properly.” But companies also need to ensure they have proper IT risk management systems, with Anstee noting that some infections WannaCry could have been blocked quickly if proper processes had been in place – and various departments had communicated properly. “You can’t really blame anyone for this,” he concludes, “it really is a lot about talking to each other.” Source: http://www.itproportal.com/news/why-the-internet-of-things-could-lead-to-the-next-great-wave-of-ddos-attacks/

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Why the Internet of Things could lead to the next great wave of DDoS attacks

Hacked: How Business Is Fighting Back Against the Explosion in Cybercrime

Business is under assault from cybercriminals like never before, and the cost to companies is exploding. Here’s what you need to know about safeguarding your digital assets. 1. Under attack In the summer of 2015, several of New York’s most prestigious and trusted corporate law firms, including Cravath Swaine & Moore and Weil Gotshal & Manges, found themselves under cyberattack. A trio of hackers in China had snuck into the firms’ computer networks by tricking partners into revealing their email passwords. Once inside the partners’ accounts, the thieves snooped on highly sensitive documents about upcoming mergers. Then, from computers halfway around the world, the cybercrooks allegedly traded on the purloined information, netting $4 million in stock market gains. Like most other victims of corporate espionage, the firms preferred to keep mum about having been victimized. They feared antagonizing other digital thugs as well as damaging their reputations as keepers of clients’ secrets. Instead, word of the attack leaked in the press and then was confirmed by federal prosecutors and the firms themselves. The Feds made public their discoveries and trumpeted their efforts to bring the alleged perpetrators to justice. “This case of cyber meets securities fraud should serve as a wake-up call for law firms around the world,” said Preet Bharara, then the U.S. Attorney in Manhattan. “You are and will be the targets of cyberhacking because you have information valuable to would-be criminals.” It may have been a shock to the system for the legal community, but the incident only served to underscore a hard truth that CEOs, company directors, and network security experts have been grappling with for some time now: Business is under assault like never before from hackers, and the cost and severity of the problem is escalating almost daily. The latest statistics are a call to arms: According to Cisco, the number of so-called distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks—assaults that flood a system’s servers with junk web traffic—jumped globally by 172% in 2016. Cisco projects the total to grow by another two and a half times, to 3.1 million attacks, by 2021. Indeed, the pace of cyberassaults is only increasing. Internet security firm Nexusguard reports that it observed a 380% increase in the number of DDoS attacks in the first quarter of 2017 compared with a year earlier. As the number and scale of network attacks grow, the toll on business is rising. The average total cost of a data breach in the U.S. in 2014 was $5.85 million, according to research from IBM and the Ponemon Institute, and this year it’s estimated to be $7.35 million. According to a report earlier this year from business insurer Hiscox, cybercrime cost the global economy more than $450 billion in 2016. The WannaCry ransomware attack alone, which crippled computers in more than 150 countries in May, could cost as much as $4 billion according to some estimates. What is slowly dawning on corporate hacking victims is how vulnerable and defenseless they really are, even when their opponents may be three guys in a room halfway around the world. Expensive data-security systems and high-priced information security consultants don’t faze today’s hackers, who have the resources to relentlessly mount assaults until they succeed. In the New York law-firm case, for example, prosecutors said the attackers attempted to penetrate targeted servers more than 100,000 times over seven months. It has become abundantly clear that no network is completely safe. Where once companies thought they could defend themselves against an onslaught, they’re now realizing that resistance is, if not futile, certainly less important than having a plan in place to detect and neutralize intruders when they strike. But there remains a gaping chasm between awareness of the threat and readiness to address it: A survey last fall by IBM and Ponemon of 2,400 security and IT professionals found that 75% of the respondents said they did not have a formal cybersecurity incident response plan across their organization. And 66% of those who replied weren’t confident in their organization’s ability to recover from an attack. Cybercrime is metastasizing for the same reason online services have become so popular with consumers and businesses alike: Ever-more-accessible technology. Hacking is easier than ever thanks to the ever-growing number of online targets and the proliferation of off-the-shelf attack software. The very Internet networks that were built for convenience and profit are exposing their users to a steady stream of new threats. What’s more, the tense state of affairs is a glaring example of how the entire nature of business has changed in the digital age. In most cases, technology is much more than just a supplement to a company’s core operations. For scores of the world’s most valuable companies—from Alphabet to Amazon to Facebook to Uber—the assets that live on their networks are their core operations. No sector of corporate America is safe. Hackers have plundered big retailers like Neiman Marcus and Home Depot for credit card and customer information. They’ve burrowed into banks like JPMorgan Chase. Even tech companies can’t seem to protect themselves. Yahoo’s ineptitude in repelling (or even being aware of) hackers forced it to reduce its sale price to Verizon. Google and Facebook recently fell victim to a hacker who conned their accountants into wiring him a total of more than $100 million. And OneLogin, a startup that bills itself as a secure password management service, recently lost certain customer data to hackers. In one survey, 66% of security and I.T. professionals replied that they weren’t confident that their organization could recover from a cyberattack. It’s not like companies aren’t trying to play defense. Accenture estimates that companies worldwide spent $84 billion in 2015 to protect against attacks. That spending is an acknowledgment that every company needs to safeguard its digital assets, which in turn requires knowing about the criminals that keep coming at them and what defenses they can build to minimize the damage. 2. A new breed of criminal Hacking is particularly frustrating for corporate executives who don’t understand their enemy. Embezzlers or extortionists? Sure. But faceless gangs of nasty nerds? It’s often harder for CEOs to wrap their brains around the motivation of their antagonists—or their audacity. “At the C-level they feel violated,” says Jay Leek, a venture capitalist pursuing cybersecurity investments and a former chief information security officer at private equity giant Blackstone. “I witness this emotional ‘What just happened?’ You don’t walk in physically to a company and violate it.” The brazenness Leek describes is a hallmark of hackers who—despite their mystique in popular culture—are basically everyday thieves, like bank robbers. Where hackers are different, however, is that they rarely meet in person. Instead, they convene in online forums on the “dark web,” an anonymous layer of the Internet that requires a special browser to access. Deep in the forums, crooks hatch hacking plots of all sorts: breaking into corporate databases or selling stolen Social Security numbers or purchasing inside information from unscrupulous employees. Cybercriminals have proved adept at adopting successful corporate strategies of their own. A recent development has seen the cleverest crooks selling hacking tools to criminal small-fry. It’s analogous to semiconductor companies licensing their technology to device manufacturers. According to a report from security software giant Symantec, gangs now offer so-called ransomware as a service, a trick that involves licensing software that freezes computer files until a company pays up. The gangs then take their cut for providing the license to their criminal customers. If it weren’t all blatantly illegal, the practices would be laudably corporate. “Cybercriminals no longer need all the skills to complete any particular crime,” says Nicole Friedlander, a former assistant U.S. Attorney in charge of the key Southern District of New York’s complex fraud and cybercrime unit. “Instead, they can hire other cybercriminals online who have those skills and do it together.” In that sense, hackers have become service providers like doctors or lawyers or anyone else, says Friedlander, who joined the New York office of law firm Sullivan & Cromwell last year.           Graphic by Nicolas Rapp But the bad guys aren’t all freelancers. In fact, some of the most sinister hacking outfits operating today are “state-sponsored” groups supported, or at least loosely supervised, by governments. That includes the Russians who are believed to have hacked into the Democratic National Committee last year and the North Korean team credited with unleashing the WannaCry malware as a moneymaking scheme. 3. Playing defense In early March, the information security team at ride-hailing giant Uber leaped into action: An Uber employee had reported a suspicious email message, and similar reports were flooding in from all over the company. Uber’s databases contain the email addresses and personal information of millions of riders around the world, making security a particularly pressing issue. And the company has had its share of problems as a caretaker of sensitive data. In 2014, Uber suffered a breach that exposed the insurance and driver’s license information of tens of thousands of drivers; it took the mega-startup months to discover and investigate the incident and fully notify its drivers. As soon as the alarm was raised in March, Uber established an “incident commander” to manage the developing situation. The job of the incident commander—a term of art in cybersecurity circles—is to keep the company informed about potential attacks. It turned out that the attack was targeting users of Google’s Gmail service, not Uber itself. But anyone with a Gmail address was vulnerable. Later that same day Google fixed the vulnerability in its Gmail service, allowing Uber’s incident commander to stand down. Uber’s reaction is an example of the vigilance with which companies must treat the torrent of threats coming at them every day. John “Four” Flynn, a former Facebook executive who now is chief information security officer for Uber, says the key to cybersecurity incidents—which he defines as everything from a data breach to a stolen laptop—is to have a clear communication strategy. “During an incident, the role of executives is to give support,” says Flynn. “There’s no room for confusion about who’s in charge.”           Graphic by Nicolas Rapp   Flynn has every right to sound confident in his authority. The chief information security officer, or CISO, is possibly the hottest job in the C-suite today. Cybercrime is so serious that these formerly little-known and unloved executives now typically have a direct line to boards of directors—a big break from the past. Before, the CISO would report to the chief information officer, who was responsible for buying and operating computers, not obsessing over flies in the ointment. If the CISO sounded the alarm over a breach, too often he or she ended up being the one sacrificed to appease top management. “It was my job to tell my boss his baby was ugly,” one former information security executive laments. These days, though, smart companies treat hacking threats like other existential risks to their business—recessions, terrorist attacks, and natural disasters come to mind—and plan accordingly. The CISO is pivotal in maintaining readiness. “If you’re a Fortune 500 company, you already have a response,” says Leek, the former executive at Blackstone, which had several portfolio companies that suffered breaches, including arts-and-crafts merchant Michaels Stores. “But people forget to take it out, blow the dust off, and recall: ‘Let’s do what we decided when we had a sound mind.’ ” Having a clear line of authority and a good action plan take a company only so far. At some point it has to call the cops, specifically the Federal Bureau of Investigation or the U.S. Secret Service. Both agencies have reach and power that allow them to take the fight to foreign cybercrooks. On several occasions, U.S. law enforcement agents working undercover on the dark web have managed to lure presumed offenders out of hiding with phony deals, and then had them apprehended in and extradited to the U.S. During the incident, the role of executives is to give support,” says Uber’s chief information officer. “There’s no room for confusion about who’s in charge.” Calling law enforcement has downsides, however. The likely outcome—an investigation—imposes burdens on the victim company in terms of money and time. And it increases the chance that sensitive details about the hack will leak publicly. That’s why the best course of action is for companies to avoid FBI-level hacking incidents in the first place. A new, multibillion-dollar industry has sprung up to help. 4. An industry is born The videoconference camera looked like any other. But unbeknownst to its corporate owner, the device was working overtime: Hackers had captured the microphone remotely and were using it to spy on every meeting that took place in the boardroom. The company, which does not want to be identified, finally got wise to the spying scheme thanks to Darktrace, a global cybersecurity company that uses artificial intelligence to detect aberrant activity on client networks. Darktrace CEO Nicole Eagan says her company noticed the camera had been gobbling abnormal amounts of data. This raised a red flag, enabling Darktrace to notify its client that something was amiss. Darktrace is just one of hundreds of firms that offer help to combat the hacking epidemic. Once a stodgy corner of enterprise software, cybersecurity has become a hot sector for venture capitalists. Investors put some $3.5 billion into a total of 404 security startups last year, according to New York research firm CB Insights. That’s up from $1.8 billion for 279 investments in 2013.           Graphic by Nicolas Rapp   For executives, all of this entrepreneurial activity translates into a dizzying array of security options. There are newcomers like Tanium, for instance, which offers a service that lets companies see who is on their network. Publicly traded Palo Alto Networks makes a kind of intelligent firewall that uses machine learning to thwart intruders. There are also a host of niche security firms such as Area 1 (which specializes in defending against phishing scams) and Lookout (which is a mobile-phone-focused security service). With all of this firepower arrayed against it, how can cybercrime continue to grow so fast? One answer is that some of the glitzy defense systems don’t work as advertised. Security insiders grumble about firms bamboozling clients with “blinky lights” in order to sell “scareware”—software that plays to customers’ insecurities but doesn’t protect them. At the end of the day, though, humans are as much to blame as software. “The weak underbelly of security is not tech failure but poor process implementation or social engineering,” says Asheem Chandna, an investor with Greylock Partners and a Palo Alto Networks director. Chandna notes that most hacking attacks come about in two ways, neither of which involves a high level of technical sophistication: An employee clicks on a booby-trapped link or attachment—perhaps in an email that appears to be from her boss—or someone steals an employee’s log-in credentials and gets access to the company network. While cyberdefense tools can mitigate such attacks, some will always succeed. Humans are curious creatures and, in a big organization, there will always be someone who clicks on a message like, “Uh-oh. Did you see these pictures of you from the office party?” When it comes to hacking, a penny of offense can defeat a dollar’s worth of defense. That’s why the fight against hacking promises to be a never-ending battle.   Source: https://fortune.com/2017/06/22/cybersecurity-business-fights-back/

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Hacked: How Business Is Fighting Back Against the Explosion in Cybercrime

Final Fantasy 14 is experiencing DDoS attacks

Trouble logging in? It may be due to hackers Final Fantasy 14’s servers have been under intense strain this past weekend. It now seems that these issues are the direct result of distributed denial-of-service attacks, Square Enix stated today. The attacks have apparently been going on since June 16, the first day that the game’s second expansion, Stormblood, went live for early access. This past weekend, early adopters were met with congested servers that were filled to capacity. Some queues just to log in surpassed 6,000 users. In the game proper, overwhelmed servers have lead to increased load times and made some quests impossible to complete. Stormblood was officially released yesterday and as of today, massive amounts of access requests due to the alleged hack are continuing to occur. Square Enix has stated that its technicians are doing all they can to defend against the attacks, but they are “continuing to take place by changing their methods at every moment.” The company also assured players that character data and private information associated with accounts have not been affected. Source: https://www.polygon.com/2017/6/21/15845898/final-fantasy-14-stormblood-servers-ddos-attack

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Final Fantasy 14 is experiencing DDoS attacks

Risk Management Pros Say an IoT Security Incident Could Be Catastrophic

A recent survey by the Ponemon Insitute and the Shared Assessments Program of 553 people with a role in risk management in their organizations found that 94 percent of those surveyed said a security incident related to unsecured IoT devices or applications could be catastrophic. Still, just 44 percent of respondents said their organization has the ability to protect their network or enterprise systems from risky IoT devices, and only 25 percent said their boards require assurances that IoT risks are being appropriately assessed, managed and monitored. Additionally, 77 percent of respondents said they don’t consider IoT-related risks in their third party due diligence, and 67 percent don’t evaluate IoT security and privacy practices before engaging in a business relationship. Just 30 percent of respondents said managing third-party IoT risks is a priority in their organization. “Ready or not, IoT third party risk is here,” Shared Assessments senior vice president Charlie Miller said in a statement. “Given the proliferation of connected devices, today’s cyber climate is evolving and organizations have to shift their focus to the security of external parties, now more than ever.” “In order to avoid becoming the next big headline, our security tactics have to evolve along with the threats,” Miller added. “New technology and practices are needed to ensure security, and this starts by communicating the risks to the right people and acknowledging potential devastating outcomes when engaging with a third party. Avoiding these problems can no longer be the solution.” Preventative Measures In response, the report urges organizations to take the following key steps: Ensure inclusion of third-party and IoT risks occurs at all governance levels including the board. Update asset management processes and inventory systems to include IoT devices, and understand the security characteristics of all inventoried devices. When devices are found to have inadequate security controls, replace them. Continue to leverage and enhance contracts and policies and expand scope to include IoT specific requirements. Expand third-party assessment techniques and processes to ensure presence and effectiveness of controls specific to IoT devices. Develop specific sourcing and procurement requirements to ensure only IoT devices that are designed with security functions included and enabled are considered for product selection or acquisition. Devise new strategies, technologies and tactics directed specifically at reducing threats posed by IoT devices. Collaborate with industry experts, peers, associations and regulators to ensure IoT risk management best practices are devised, communicated and implemented. Include IoT in communication, awareness and training at all levels: board, executive, corporate, business unit and third-party. Recognize the increasing dependence on technology to support the business and the risk posed by this dependence. Embrace new technologies and innovations, but not at the expense of security, and ensure security controls are included as fundamental and core requirements. Seventy-two percent of respondents said the pace of innovation in IoT and the varying standards for security make it hard to ensure the security of IoT devices and applications, and 65 percent said the drive for innovation in the IoT ecosystem requires new approaches to IT strategies and tactics. Breaches and DDoS Attacks Strikingly, 78 percent of respondents said a data breach involving an unsecured IoT device is likely to occur within the next two years, and 76 percent said the same of a DDoS attack involving an unsecured IoT device. The concerns come as DDoS attacks become more and more frequent — according to Nexusguard’s Q1 2017 DDoS Threat Report, DDoS attack frequency surged by 380 percent in the first quarter of 2017, compared to the same time period the previous year. The percentage of days with attacks larger than 10 Gbps rose significantly between January 2017 (48.39 percent) and March 2017 (64.29 percent). Radware vice president of security Carl Herberger told eSecurity Planet by email that the rapid proliferation of unsecured IoT devices is driving the increase in DDoS attacks. “The Mirai attack made headlines last year, but it should not be considered a one-off,” he said. “Instead, this event was a predictor of what is to come.” “Hackers are constantly developing new ways to leverage connected devices with little to no security protections to form larger and larger botnets that are able to execute dangerous and sizable DDoS attacks,” Herberger added. “We’ve seen various botnets appear over the last year, including Hajime, BricketBot and Persirai, demonstrating that IoT devices have become a new battleground for hackers.” “Until manufacturers, the government, and consumers take a hard look at IoT security, the threat of bigger, more frequent IoT-fueled DDoS attacks will only loom larger,” Herberger said. Source: http://www.esecurityplanet.com/network-security/risk-management-pros-say-an-iot-security-incident-could-be-catastrophic.html

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Risk Management Pros Say an IoT Security Incident Could Be Catastrophic

DDOS Attacks on the Rise

Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks leverage compromised devices to generate a flood of traffic, overwhelming online services and rendering them unresponsive. DDoS services are widely available on the internet, with research by Trend Micro finding that the small cost of US$150 can buy a DDoS attack for a week. (It also brings organised crime into your life – but that’s a different point!) The latest statistics from Cisco reveal that the number of DDoS attacks grew by 172% in 2016. Combine this with an average DDoS attack size of 1.2Gbps, capable of taking most organisations offline, and there is real cause for concern among cyber security experts. It is hard to trace DDoS attacks to their proprietors, as the majority of devices used in attacks belong to innocent users. Organisations must understand the risk and impact posed by DDoS attacks, and implement mitigation strategies that promote business continuity in the face of these attacks. Industry peers must share knowledge where appropriate, and keep government agencies adequately informed, to deter hackers from launching a DDoS attack. Cisco expects that the number of DDoS attacks in the future will only get worse, with 3.1 million predicted attacks in 2021 globally. Source: http://www.natlawreview.com/article/ddos-attacks-rise

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DDOS Attacks on the Rise

DDoS attacks continue to morph

According to Bryan Hamman, territory manager for sub-Saharan Africa at Arbor Networks, while reflection and amplification techniques have come to characterise a large number of complex, multi-vector DDoS attacks, the latest approach is to use reflection to exploit connection-less lightweight directory access protocols (CLDAPs). Traditionally, large attacks based on reflection or amplification were the likes of NTP, DNS, SNMP, SSDP, SQL RS or Chargen. “But this new trend has now been discovered ‘in the wild’, with the force to generate highly efficient and destructive results,” he says. What is CLDAP? CLDAP is essentially a computer networking protocol designed for legitimate users to query and modify stored data on X.500 directory systems. It is typically used on Windows Exchange servers and domain controllers. By providing directory and access control, one can use CLDAP to locate printers on a network, find a phone number of an employee, or see the security groups a user belongs to, for instance. The modus operandi involves the attacker spoofing the source of a connectionless protocol, pinging the server with ultra-small queries. The server then responds to the victim with a far larger response. Initial findings suggest that this approach can amplify the initial response in the region of 46 to 55 times the size. “This makes CLDAP attacks highly efficient. A well-orchestrated attack that exploits an organisation’s vulnerabilities could very quickly achieve massive total attack size, and bring down the digital systems of all but the largest and best-protected organisations.” Primary targets Reports* from cloud giant Akamai show that the largest example of CLDAP reflection as the sole vector resulted in a payload of 52 bytes, amplified to as much as 70 times in this case – creating an attack data payload of 3,662 bytes, a peak bandwidth of 24Gbps, and 2 million packets per second. CLDAP attacks have primarily targeted the software and technology industry. Other industries targeted include internet and telecom, media and entertainment, education, retail and consumer goods, and financial services. Fighting back To effectively resist this type of DDoS attack, organisations need to thoroughly address the potential threat at a network level, by covering a number of bases: Prevent abuse: Ensure that you have anti-spoofing deployed at the edges of your networks. Detect attacks: Leverage flow telemetry exported from all network edges to Arbor technology, to automatically detect, classify, traceback, and alert on DDoS attacks. Ready mitigation techniques: Deploy network infrastructure-based reaction/ mitigation techniques such as Source-Based Remotely-Triggered Blackholing (S/RTBH) and flowspec at all network edges. Mitigate attacks: Deploy intelligent DDoS mitigation systems at strategic points within your network. Minimise damage: Deploy Quality-of-Service (QoS) mechanisms at all network edges to police CLDAP traffic down to an appropriate level. Remediate CLDAP services: Proactively scan for and remediate abusable CLDAP services on the ISP and customer networks to reduce the number of abusable CLDAP servers. “Like many other reflection techniques, organisations must always have ingress filtering in place. Unless there is a real need for your firm to have CLDAP available over the internet, you shouldn’t expose this protocol,” concludes Hamman. Source: http://www.bizcommunity.com/Article/196/661/163351.html

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DDoS attacks continue to morph

Don’t all rush out at once, but there are a million devices ripe to be the next big botnet

As bad as Mirai was, it could have been much worse A wormable vulnerability involving an estimated one million digital video recorders (DVR) is at risk of creating a Mirai-style botnet, security researchers warn.…

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Don’t all rush out at once, but there are a million devices ripe to be the next big botnet

DDoS attacks hitting ‘record-breaking’ levels as volumes increase 380%

DDoS attackers are hitting hard, fast and with no breaks in between, leading to record-breaking attacks over hours or even days, according to Nexusguard’s Q1 2017 Threat Report. Those record-breaking attacks over Valentine’s Day, Chinese New year and other ‘typically quiet’ periods during the season. “In APAC, a lengthy attack January 28-31, the period of Chinese New Year, lasted 2 days, 19 hours, and 40 minutes. It was a widespread, disruptive event that left celebrants weary and exhausted upon returning to work,” the report says. DDoS attack volumes have also risen 380% since the same time last year, according to Nexusguard’s statistics, based on 16,600 attacks. While 51% of attacks lasted fewer than 90 minutes, 4% exceeded 1440 minutes. 77.3% of attacks were less than 10Gbps, while 20% were between 10-200Gbps and 2% exceeded 200Gbps. The United States, China and Japan rounded out the top three sources for attacks. The rest of APAC was relatively unused as an attack source. However it’s not just DDoS attacks that are on the rise: HTTP flood attacks jumped 147% in the last quarter alone. It is now one of the leading volumetric attacks, exceeding both TCP and DNS attacks. The company cites the Internet of Things as a major weak point, particularly as the range of insecure devices and connections expodes. DDoS attacks can be persistent and long-lasting, which is a major area of concern. “IoT botnets are only the beginning for this new reign of cyber attacks. Hackers have the scale to conduct gigantic, continuous attacks; plus, teams have to contend with attacks that use a combination of volumetric and application aspects,” comments Nexusguard’s CTO Juniman Kasman. Those attacks are not happening in isolation. 93% of attacks combine application and volumetric vulnerabilities. Multiple DDoS attacks can also overwhelm systems. The company warns that organisations that haven’t invested in – or haven’t upgraded – multi-layered defense mechanisms run the highest risk of attack exposure. “This early data for 2017 shows that enterprises need to employ multi-layered defenses that use nimble resources, including large, redundant scrubbing networks and around-the-clock security operations if they hope to keep from drowning in the deluge of new attacks,” Kasman adds. Source: https://securitybrief.co.nz/story/ddos-attacks-hitting-record-breaking-levels-volumes-increase-380/

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DDoS attacks hitting ‘record-breaking’ levels as volumes increase 380%

Where does the cyber security buck stop?

Late last year, Bruce Schneier testified before the U.S. House Energy and Commerce committee asking them to consider imposing security regulations on the Internet of Things (IoT). Schneier argued that neither IoT buyers nor sellers care about a device’s security. Sellers are interested in quickly releasing inexpensive products to market, while buyers only care about getting cool gadgets for cheap. This unhealthy and unsecure IoT market results in incidents like the Mirai botnet, in which … More ?

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Where does the cyber security buck stop?

DDoS attack brings Qatar’s Al Jazeera website to its knees

Hacking attempts come amid diplomatic crisis in the Gulf Qatar-based news network Al Jazeera yesterday said it was being targeted with systematic hacking attempts.…

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DDoS attack brings Qatar’s Al Jazeera website to its knees