Tag Archives: copyright

Ello social network hit by suspected BLOODY DDoS attack

Anti-Facebook site forced to temporarily wave Buh-Bye Ello, the social network site intended to serve as something of an antidote to ad-stuffed Facebook, was hit by a suspected Distributed-Denial-of-Service attack today.…

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Ello social network hit by suspected BLOODY DDoS attack

BLAM, BLAM, BLAM… nooooo! Hacker crew Lizard Squad spits DDoS venom on Call of Duty

JUST before you blasted 2 ‘copters with 1 rocket launcher Hackers from the group Lizard Squad have reneged on their promise to quit earlier this month, apparently launching distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks on major gaming industry websites.…

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BLAM, BLAM, BLAM… nooooo! Hacker crew Lizard Squad spits DDoS venom on Call of Duty

Use home networking kit? DDoS bot is BACK… and it has EVOLVED

OMG, it reconfigures your firewall… SAVE yourselves, Linux lords A router-to-router bot first detected two years ago has evolved – and now has the capability to reconfigure the firewalls of its victims.…

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Use home networking kit? DDoS bot is BACK… and it has EVOLVED

PlayStation network back online after DDoS attack

Sony’s PlayStation and Entertainment networks are back online after they were forced offline by a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack, the company said late Sunday. “People can now enjoy the services on their PlayStation devices,” Sony spokesman Sid Shuman wrote in a blog post “We have seen no evidence of any intrusion to the network and no evidence of any unauthorized access to users personal information,” he said, also offering apologies for any inconvenience caused. Sony was hit by a large scale DDoS attack which struck upstream traffic routes over which Sony has no control, affecting players’ ability to log in, Sony Online Entertainment President John Smedley wrote on Twitter on Sunday. DDoS attacks attempt to crash a network by sending large amounts of data to a service provider. A group calling itself the “Lizard Squad” claimed on Twitter to be behind the attack. It said that it had “planted the ISIS flag on @Sony’s servers,” referring to the militant group that occupies parts of Syria and Iraq. Earlier on Sunday, the group tweeted directly to American Airlines writing that it had “received reports” that a flight carrying Smedley “has explosives on board.” This appeared to be a way to aggravate Sony further. Smedley had tweeted earlier that his flight had been diverted for reasons that had to do with “something about security and our cargo.” The Boeing 757, with 179 passengers and six crew which left from Dallas-Fort Worth for San Diego was diverted to Phoenix due to a “a security-related issue” and landed safely, according to American Airlines. Source: http://www.cio-asia.com/resource/networking/playstation-network-back-online-after-ddos-attack/

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PlayStation network back online after DDoS attack

BBC goes titsup: iPlayer to News websites down – Auntie working to fix it

Did DDoS attack on Sony kick Beeb TV offline? Updated   The BBC’s web servers fell over today, taking down its online news and iPlayer services – but it’s unclear whether the outage relates to the significant Distributed Denial of Service attack hitting Sony’s gaming network right now.…

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BBC goes titsup: iPlayer to News websites down – Auntie working to fix it

Eve Online Servers Knocked Offline Due to DDoS Attacks

Eve Online, the space-based videogame with over half a million active players, has been forced offline for more than 12 hours due to a series of cyber attacks against a cluster of its servers located in London. According to the Eve Online Status Twitter account, the first signs of trouble were seen at around 8pm on Thursday, 21 August, and by 11pm the Icelandic-based CCP Games which develops the game had confirmed the problem was due to a series of distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks. DDoS attacks are a common tool used by criminals to flood servers with traffic in order to knock them offline and unavailable to anyone trying to access them. Some had apparently linked the offline status of the game to the recent activity of the Bardarbunga volcano in Iceland which is on the verge of erupting, however CCP Games explicitly ruled this out.   The problem is affecting the Tranquility server cluster, which all Eve Online players connect to in order to play the game. This cluster of servers is based in London. Even the Eve Online wiki is inaccessible as it too is seemingly hosted on the Tranquility server. An update from CCP Games on Twitter at 8am on Friday, 22 August, simply saying: “Tranquility is currently under heavy load again” and pointing player to a forum thread. However this thread also appears to be offline at the time of publication. DDoS attacks are often used by unscrupulous companies in order to knock rivals offline for a sustained period of time, with many cyber-criminals renting out DDoS services for as little as £5-an-hour. Eve Online is a massively multiplayer online game set in the fictional world of New Eden where players pilot customisable spaceships through a galaxy of over 7,500 star systems. The game is also unique in that its developers create the structure of New Eden but then handed over control of what happens in the game to the players. The rest is a virtual world where corporations and alliances hold huge power and where huge battles can cost the equivalent of over $300,000 in real world money. Source: http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/eve-online-servers-knocked-offline-due-ddos-attacks-1462180

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Eve Online Servers Knocked Offline Due to DDoS Attacks

Chinese Linux Trojan makes the jump to Windows – DDoS attacks largely aimed within China

A CHINESE TROJAN , one of the few to be written for the Linux operating system, has seemingly made the jump to Windows. First reported in May by Russian anti-malware software house Dr Web, the original malware known as “Linux.Dnsamp” is a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) Trojan, which, according to the company blog, transfers between Linux machines, altering the startup scripts, collecting and sending machine configuration data to the hackers’ server and then running silently waiting for orders. Now it appears that the same hackers have ported the Trojan to run in Windows as “Trojan.Dnsamp.1? The Windows version gains entry to the system under the guise of a Windows Service Test called “My Test 1?. It is then saved in the system folder of the infected machine under the name “vmware-vmx.exe”. When triggered, just like its Linux counterpart, the Trojan sends system information back to the hackers’ central server and then awaits the signal to start a DDoS attack or start downloading other malicious programs. Fortunately, the vast majority of the attacks using this method were aimed at other Chinese websites, which were attacked 28,093 times, but Dr Web warns that US websites came second with nine percent of attacks. Although the threat of malware is an everyday hazard to most computer users, to find an attack on Linux is much rarer, and to find any kind of malware that has been ported from one operating system to another is almost unheard of. In June, RSS reader service Feedly, note app Evernote and streaming music service Deezer all suffered DDoS attacks. Google is working on Project Shield, an initative designed to help smaller web servers fight off DDoS attacks. Source: http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/2361245/chinese-linux-trojan-makes-the-jump-to-windows

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Chinese Linux Trojan makes the jump to Windows – DDoS attacks largely aimed within China

DDoS extortion attacks on the rise

While digital ransom attacks come in various types and forms, Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks are top of the list of methods used by attackers to force money from targeted companies. So says Bryan Hamman, territory manager of Arbor Networks, who points out that in recent weeks, well-known names such as Evernote and Feedly have fallen victim to extortion attacks, but these companies are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to this very lucrative criminal activity. InfoSecurity Magazine reports that this year the number of network time protocol amplification attacks increased 371.43%. The average peak DDoS attack volume increased a staggering 807.48%. The news aggregator Feedly said it had come under a DDoS attack from cyber criminals, which was preventing users from accessing its service. “Criminals are attacking Feedly with a distributed denial of service attack. The attacker is trying to extort money from us to make it stop. We refused to give in and are working with our network providers to mitigate the attack as best as we can,” said Feedly in a blog post. “‘Pay up or we’ll take your Web site down’, so goes the adage that usually accompanies ransom-based cyber-attacks,” says Hamman. According to Arbor’s ninth annual Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report, DDoS extortion attacks account for 15% of all DDoS attacks. While it may seem like a relatively small percentage, one must consider that as many as 10 000 DDoS attacks occur world-wide every day and the potential cost in damages and reputation can have a significant impact on a targeted organisation, Hamman points out. He explains that DDoS extortion attacks are generally volumetric, high bandwidth attacks launched with the aim of crashing a company’s Web site or server by bombarding it with packets, which originate from a large number of geographically distributed bots. The size of volumetric DDoS attacks continues to increase year on year, and they remain a major threat to enterprises and Internet service providers alike, he adds. “Traditionally, DDoS extortion attacks were used against online gambling sites, around major sporting events. Criminal gangs would initiate attacks that would bring the Web site down just before the event was to start, thus forcing the companies to choose between suffering a major loss in monetary and reputational terms or paying up. Increasingly, however, DDoS attacks are being used to extort money from all sorts of businesses and the reality is that no company should feel safe,” he says. So what is the right response when it comes to extortion demands? Hamman asks. “The answer is simple and always the same – not to give in. Organisations should under no circumstances agree to pay the ransom – it can set a dangerous precedent and encourage more attacks in the future; while it might make the pain go away in the short term, the long-term results are generally not worth it. “Declining to pay comes, of course, with severe consequences – as we saw from recent attacks on Feedly, who suffered from three separate waves of DDoS attacks. However, the company has now recovered from the attack and is operating as normal. Furthermore, it has been praised for its brave decision by the security community and even its own customers,” says Hamman. According to Hamman, many companies still rely on reactive measures such as router filters and firewalls, which are inefficient and not sophisticated enough to protect against organised cyber crime. Instead, he says, organisations need to invest in preventive, multi-layered mitigation, which includes on-premise and cloud protection, as well as allowing for co-operation with their ISP or hosting company. In addition, putting a mitigation strategy in place, should the worst happen, is of crucial importance – especially as only 17% of organisations globally feel they are fully prepared for a security incident. “By building defences, implementing plans ahead of time and refusing to give in, businesses needn’t feel threatened anymore – attackers wanting to make easy money will have to look elsewhere.” Source: http://www.itweb.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=136989:DDoS-extortion-attacks-on-the-rise&catid=265

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DDoS extortion attacks on the rise