Tag Archives: ddos-attacks

America’s Cardroom, WPN Hit by DDoS Attack Again

It had been a while, but America’s Cardroom seemed due for another cyber attack. Yup, leading into the Labor Day weekend, ACR and its network, the Winning Poker Network, were hit with a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack, something that is unfortunately not a unique event for either the online poker room or the network. The attack began Thursday evening, affecting, among many other games, ACR’s Online Super Series (OSS) Cub3d. Problems continued all the way through Saturday. America’s Cardroom initially tweeted about the issues at about quarter after eight Thursday night, writing, “We are currently experiencing a DDOS attack, all running tournaments have been paused. Will keep you updated.” A half hour later, ACR announced that it was cancelling all tournaments in progress and providing refunds per the site’s terms and conditions. At about 9:00pm, the site was back up, but the DDoS attacks continued, causing poker client interruptions less than two and a half hours later. Problems continued well into Friday morning until ACR and WPN finally got things under control (temporarily) close to noon. The pattern continued that evening, with games going down after 6:00pm Friday and then resuming, and going down again after 7:00pm. Finally, around noon Saturday, ACR’s techs seemed to get a handle on things “for good.” In a Distributed Denial of Service attack, the attacker (or attackers) floods a server with millions of communications requests at once. It’s not a virus or a hack or anything malicious like that, but the communications overwhelm the server and grind it to a halt. Think of it like the traffic jam to end all traffic jams. It wouldn’t be THAT big of a deal if the attack was coming from one source, but since it is “distributed,” the attacker arranges it so that it originates from literally millions of IP addresses. It makes defending one’s network insanely difficult. To use another brilliant illustration, if you are trapped in a house and a zombie horde is coming for your juicy brains, it’s scary and awful, but if all the zombies decide to come in through the front door, you can probably handle it if properly equipped. If they surround you and just crash in through every door, window, and mouse hole like in Night of the Living Dead, might as well develop a taste for human flesh because you’re screwed. As with other DDoS attacks, the network was contacted by the aggressor, who demanded a ransom of some sort. WPN CEO Phil Nagy went on Twitch and said he refused to cave to any demands. He even posted a brief series of messages from the attacker, who said he was doing it on behalf of a competing poker room (all spelling mistakes what-not his): this is my job anouther site give me money for doos you and i ddos you this is my job Nagy said that he hoped that by at least making it public that it may be another site responsible for the DDoS attack that it will make someone nervous that they could get caught and the attacks will subside. WPN first experienced a major DDoS attack in December 2014, during its Million Dollar Sunday tournament, when it caused disconnections, lag, and registration problems. It happened again in September 2015 and again in October 2015. The network will be re-running many of the tournaments, including the OSS and MOSS, and will cut the buy-in of the million dollar guaranteed OSS tourney in half as well as add an extra Sunday Million. Source: https://www.pokernewsdaily.com/americas-cardroom-wpn-hit-ddos-attack-30342/

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America’s Cardroom, WPN Hit by DDoS Attack Again

Alleged UK Bank Hacker Extradited From Germany

U.K. officials have extradited the man who allegedly masterminded a cyberattack earlier this year that impacted two of England’s biggest banks. They have accused 29-year-old Daniel Kaye, who was found in Germany, of using an infected computer network to damage and blackmail both Barclays and Lloyds Banking Group, The Financial Times  reported. Following the cyberattack, Lloyds found its digital services crippled on and off for over 48 hours in January 2017, preventing some customers from being able to check their bank balances or send out payments via the network. The assault was a distributed “denial of service” (DDoS) attack, which overwhelms a firm’s website so its services don’t operate properly. The same month, Barclays fought off their own cyberattack, according to the National Crime Agency. These cybercrime attacks occurred just months following a high-profile cyberattack against Tesco Bank that caused 9,000 people to have their money stolen from accounts. HSBC also saw an attack against its personal banking website and mobile app in 2016, causing thousands of customers to be locked out of their accounts. “The investigation leading to these charges was complex and crossed borders,” said Luke Wyllie, the National Crime Agency’s senior operations manager. “Our cybercrime officers have analyzed reams of data on the way. Cybercrime is not victimless, and we are determined to bring suspects before the courts,” the  Financial Times reported. Daniel Kaye is also being accused of operating a cyberattack against Liberia’s largest internet provider, Lonestar MTN. Kaye is scheduled to appear in the U.K.’s Westminster Magistrates Court on Aug. 31. “In January, we were the target of a substantial distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack,” Lloyds Banking Group said in remarks according to news by the  Financial Times . “This was successfully defended but resulted in intermittent and temporary service issues for some customers. There was no attempt to access the bank’s systems and no customer details or accounts were compromised.” Source: http://www.pymnts.com/news/security-and-risk/2017/cybercriminal-daniel-kaye-extradited-following-ddos-cyberattacks/

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Google pulls 300 Android apps used for DDoS attacks

A number of security researchers teamed up to fight the WireX botnet. If a random storage manager or video player you downloaded recently has disappeared from your Android device, don’t worry: it might have been for your own good. Google has removed 300 apps from the Play store, which were apparently merely masquerading as legitimate applications. In truth, they were made to hi-jack your phone so it can be used as part of a botnet’s distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks. WireX, as the botnet is called, pummeled several content providers and delivery networks with traffic from the devices it hi-jacked on August 17th, though it’s been active since around August 2nd. In some cases, it also acted as a ransomware, demanding money from its victim. It was content delivery network Akamai that discovered its existence following an assault on one of its clients. The company then got together with Google and several security researchers from rival companies like Cloudflare, Flashpoint, Oracle + Dyn, RiskIQ, Team Cymru and other organizations to solve the issue. Upon learning that the Play Store is inundated with hundreds of fake WireX apps hiding behind the guise of innocuous programs like storage managers and ringtones, the big G did its part and blocked them all. Here are a few samples of infected apps: In a statement, Mountain View said it’s now also in the process of removing applications from affected devices. It’s unclear how long that would take, though, since based on the team’s research, WireX compromised over 70,000 devices from over 100 countries. Source: https://www.engadget.com/2017/08/29/google-pulls-300-android-apps-wirex-ddos/

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Google pulls 300 Android apps used for DDoS attacks

DreamHost, web hosting company, blames powerful DDoS attack for online outages

DreamHost, one of the world’s largest web hosting companies, said a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) caused significant outages Thursday affecting customers of its web and email services. The Los Angeles-based hosting provider said that “internet vigilantes” conducted an attack against part of its online infrastructure resulting in connectivity issues affecting several aspects of its operations, ranging from its online customer support features to the hosting service used by over 1.5 million websites. The attack targeted DreamHost’s Domain Name Servers (DNS) – digital directories that allow internet users to access specific websites without remembering their lengthy, numeric IP addresses – and was remedied about four hours after first being detected, according to the company. DDoS attacks involve knocking websites offline by overloading their servers with illegitimate traffic and effectively rendering them inaccessible. Low-level attacks are capable of briefly disabling websites lacking DDoS protection, but wide-scale attacks like the one conducted last year against Dyn, an American DNS provider, caused unprecedented outages affecting some of the world’s most popular websites, including Amazon and Netflix. DreamHost customers, including the Cambridge Seventh-day Adventist Church in England and the Tale of Two Wastelands video gaming project, were among those who said their websites were unavailable Thursday due to the powerful DDoS attack. The DDoS attack was confirmed by DreamHost as two of the company’s customers made headlines in their own right over their unrelated efforts to survive scrutiny: DisruptJ20, an anti-Trump protest site, and The Daily Stormer, a white supremacist website that remerged online this week with the help of DreamHost after being all but driven off the internet. A federal judge earlier Thursday ordered DreamHost to provide information sought by federal prosectors investigating the riots that erupted in Washington, D.C. during President Trump’s inauguration Jan. 20. The Daily Stormer, meanwhile, relaunched on a DreamHost website Thursday after previously being banned from the internet’s biggest domain registrars and hosting providers, including GoDaddy, Google and Cloudflare. The Daily Stormer had quietly registered the new domain using an automated signup form and was subsequently booted several hours later, , DreamHot said Thursday evening. “Unfortunately, determined internet vigilantes weren’t willing to wait for us to take that action,” DreamHost said in a statement to Ars Technica. “They instead launched a DDoS attack against all of DreamHost this morning. We were ultimately able to declaw that attack, but the end result was that most of our customers experienced intermittent connectivity issues to their sites today.” Source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2017/aug/24/dreamhost-web-hosting-company-blames-powerful-ddos/

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DreamHost, web hosting company, blames powerful DDoS attack for online outages

90% of Companies Get Attacked with Three-Year-Old Vulnerabilities

A Fortinet report released this week highlights the importance of keeping secure systems up to date, or at least a few cycles off the main release, albeit this is not recommended, but better than leaving systems unpatched for years. According to the Fortinet Q2 2017 Global Threat Landscape, 90% of organizations the company protects have experienced cyber-attacks during which intruders tried to exploit vulnerabilities that were three years or older. In addition, 60% of organizations were attacked with exploits ten years or older. Organizations that did a relatively good job at keeping systems patched would have been able to block the attacks. Nonetheless, it is always recommended that companies keep systems up to date at all times. This has been shown in the past year. First last year with a Joomla flaw that saw exploit attempts days after being disclosed, then again at the start of January when attackers started scanning for a recently disclosed WordPress flaw hours after the official announcement. The focus on older exploits is simple to explain. Not all hackers are on the same skill level of nation-state cyber-espionage units, and most rely on open-sourced exploits. The older the vulnerability, the better the chances of finding a working exploit on one of the many exploit-sharing sites currently available online. Weekend warriors Furthermore, the Fortinet includes an interesting chart that shows attackers launching attacks mostly over the weekend. There are a few simple explanations for these. First, there are no SIRT (Security Incident Response Team) responders at most businesses over the weekend. Second, most hackers have jobs as well, and the weekend is when most are free for “side activities.” Number of DDoS attacks grew after Mirai source code release Also this week, Akamai released the State of the Internet/Security Report for Q2 2017. The report contains statistics on a wide variety of web attacks that took place via the company’s infrastructure in April, May, and June. The report’s main finding is the rise in the number of DDoS attacks during the first half of 2017 after DDoS attacks went down during the second half of 2016. According to Akamai, the release of the Mirai DDoS malware source code in September 2016 helped breathe new life into a declining DDoS booter market. Since then, a large number of different botnets built on the Mirai source code have been spotted, many of which were offered as DDoS-for-hire services. In a separate research presented at the USENIX security conference last week, researchers from Cisco, Akamai, Google, and three US universities revealed that despite having a reputation of being able to take down some of the largest online companies around, most Mirai botnets were mainly used to target online gaming servers. Besides Mirai, another very active strain of DDoS-capable malware was the PBos trojan, also targeting Linux-based devices. Some of these attacks even reached the massive size of 75 Gbps. Source: https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/90-percent-of-companies-get-attacked-with-three-year-old-vulnerabilities/

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90% of Companies Get Attacked with Three-Year-Old Vulnerabilities

Online Extortion Campaigns Target Users, Companies, Security Researchers

During the past week, there has been a sudden surge in online extortion campaigns, against regular users and security researchers alike. The most devious of these was a campaign detected by Forcepoint security researcher Roland Dela Paz, and which tried to trick users into thinking hackers had gotten their hands on sensitive or sexually explicit images. Attackers wanted payments of $320 to a Bitcoin address or they would have sent the compromising materials to the victim’s friends. Massive spam wave delivered fake threats This attempted blackmail message was the subject of a massive spam campaign that took place between August 11 and 18. Dela Paz says attackers sent out extortion emails to over 33,500 victims. Most of the targets were from Australia and France. The extortion campaign was particularly active in Australia, where it caught the eye of officials at the Australian National University, who issued a safety warning on the topic, alerting students of the emails. The extortion attempt was obviously fake, says Dela Paz. “The scale of this campaign suggests that the threat is ultimately empty,” the expert explained. “If the actors did indeed possess personal details of the recipients, it seems likely they would have included elements (e.g. name, address, or date of birth) in more targeted threat emails in order to increase their credibility.” Dela Paz warns that the campaign is still ongoing. Users can recognize the blackmail attempts by the following subject line formats: “Three random letters: [recipient email]  date and time ??n??rning ?ur yest?rday’s ??nv?rs?tion” “Three random letters: [recipient email]  date and time I hav? s?m?thing that can m??? y?ur lif? w?rse” “Three random letters: [recipient email]  date and time I would not li?e t? start our kn?winga?qu?int?n?? with this” “Three random letters: [recipient email]  date and time I’m not h?p?y with y?ur beh?vior lately” “Three random letters: [recipient email]  date and time Dont y?u thin? th?t your devi?? w?r?s w?ird?” “Three random letters: [recipient email]  date and time I think th?t it is not as funny for you as it is funny for m?” Hackers tried to blackmail Swiss security researcher In addition, during the past week, there were also extortion attempts sent to organizations. A hacker group calling itself ANX-Rans tried to extort a French company. Another group calling itself CyberTeam also tried to extract a ransom payment of 5 Bitcoin (~$20,000) from Abuse.ch, the website of a prominent Swiss security researcher. These DDoS threats in the hope of extracting Bitcoin payments are called DDoS-for-Bitcoin or RDoS (Ransom DDoS) attacks. RDoS attacks have been on the rise since mid-June after a South Korean hosting provider paid a ransom of nearly $1 million after web ransomware encrypted its customer servers. Ever since then, RDoS groups became extremely active hoping for a similar payday. We’ve already covered the active groups at the time in an article here. Group posing as Anonymous targeted US companies Since then, the most prominent RDoS campaign that took place was in mid-July when a group using the name of the Anonymous hacker collective tried to extort payments from US companies under the threat of DDoS attacks. At the time, Bleeping Computer obtained a copy of the ransom email from cyber-security firm Radware, who was investigating the threats. Radware said that despite posing as Anonymous hackers, this was the same group who tried to obtain ransoms of $315,000 from four South Korean banks (for these RDoS extortions the group posed as Armada Collective, another famous hacking crew). “This is not an isolated case. This is a coordinated large-scale RDoS spam campaign that appears to be shifting across regions of the world,” Radware security researcher Daniel Smith told Bleeping Computer via email at the time. “All ransom notes received have the same expiration date,” he added. “In RDoS spam campaigns like this one the actors threaten multiple victims with a 1Tbps attack on the same day.” Most RDoS extortion attempts are empty threats The group also claimed it was in control of a Mirai botnet made up of compromised IoT devices and was capable of launching DDoS attacks of 1 Tbps. No such attacks have been observed following the ransom demands on US companies. In research presented at the USENIX security conference last week, researchers from Cisco, Akamai, Google, and three US universities revealed that despite having a reputation of being able to take down some of the largest online companies around, the most variants of the Mirai botnet were mainly used to target online gaming servers. Most of these DDoS attacks on gaming servers were also relatively small as multiple botnets broke up IoT devices (DDoS resources) among them. In addition to the group posing as Anonymous, Radware also reported on multiple RDoS extortion attempts on gaming providers that also took place in July. “We suggest companies do not pay the ransom,” Smith said at the time, a recommendation still valid today, as this encourages more blackmailers to join in. Source: https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/online-extortion-campaigns-target-users-companies-security-researchers/

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PlayStation Network was the Real Target of Mirai Botnet DDoS Attack Last Year

Last year in October Mirai Botnet, a malware strain that can take control of IoT (Internet of Things) devices and use them for large cyber attacks resulting in ‘distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) — rendering the target website/server unreachable to legitimate visitors. According to new study by researchers at Google, CloudFlare, Merit Networks, Akamai and other universities, the Mirai Botnet attack last October on DNS provider Dyn might actually be targeting the PlayStation Network (PSN). The research which was presented at the Usenix Security Symposium, Vancouver, has suggested that the DDoS attack conducted via the Mirai botnet was meant to disable PlayStation Network services as all the IP addresses targeted by the attack were name servers for the PSN. These name servers were used by Dyn to connect users to the correct IP address. The Verge reported that this Mirai botnet attack which was targeted towards bringing down PSN might be the handiwork of angry gamers. “Although the first several attacks in this period solely targeted Dyn’s DNS infrastructure, later attack commands simultaneously targeted Dyn and PlayStation infrastructure, potentially providing clues towards attacker motivation,” the researchers noted. According to the researchers, it’s not only the PlayStation Network that was being targeted by the botnet. They also detected that Xbox Live, Valve Steam, and other gaming servers were attacked during the same period too. “This pattern of behavior suggests that the Dyn attack on October 21, 2016, was not solely aimed at Dyn. The attacker was likely targeting gaming infrastructure that incidentally disrupted service to Dyn’s broader customer base,” the researchers added. The researchers also pointed out that worms like Mirai botnet prosper majorly due to the absence of apt security measures for IoT devices. This results in a ‘fragile environment ripe for abuse’. “As the IoT domain continues to expand and evolve, we hope Mirai serves as a call to arms for industrial, academic, and government stakeholders concerned about the security, privacy, and safety of an IoT-enabled world,” the researchers concluded. The attack conducted using Mirai botnet in October 2016 wasn’t a standalone one. Since after the Mirai worm code was made public, 15,194 attacks were perpetrated on 5,046 victims (4,730 individual IPs, 196 subnets, 120 domain names), across 85 countries. Source: http://www.guidingtech.com/71278/playstation-network-mirai-botnet-ddos/

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PlayStation Network was the Real Target of Mirai Botnet DDoS Attack Last Year

What is Pulse Wave? Hackers devise new DDoS attack technique aimed at boosting scale of assaults

The new attack method allows hackers to shut down targets’ networks for longer periods while simultaneously conducting attacks on multiple targets. Hackers have begun launching a new kind of DDoS attack designed to boost the scale of attacks by targeting soft spots in traditional DDoS mitigation tactics. Dubbed “Pulse Wave”, the new attack technique allows hackers to shut down targeted organisations’ networks for prolonged periods while simultaneously conducting attacks on multiple targets. The new attacks may render traditional DDoS mitigation tactics useless, experts say. Some of the pulse wave DDoS attacks detected lasted for days and “scaled as high as 350 Gbps”, according to security researchers at Imperva, who first spotted the new threat. “Comprised of a series of short-lived pulses occurring in clockwork-like succession, pulse wave assaults accounted for some of the most ferocious DDoS attacks we mitigated in the second quarter of 2017,” Imperva researchers said in a report. The researchers said they believe that the pulse wave technique was “purposefully designed” by “skilled bad actors” to boost hackers’ attack scale and output by taking advantage of “soft spots in hybrid ‘appliance first, cloud second’ mitigation solutions.” Traditional DDoS attacks involve a continuous barrage of assaults against a targeted network, while pulse wave involves short bursts of attacks that have a “highly repetitive pattern, consisting of one or more pulses every 10 minutes”. The new attacks last for at least an hour and can extend to even days. A single pulse is large and powerful enough to completely congest a network. “The most distinguishable aspect of pulse wave assaults is the absence of a ramp-up period — all attack resources are committed at once, resulting in an event that, within the first few seconds, reaches a peak capacity that is maintained over its duration,” the Imperva researchers said. ulse wave takes advantage of appliance-first hybrid mitigation solutions by preying on the “Achilles’ heel of appliance-first mitigation solutions”, – the devices’ incapability of dealing with sudden powerful attack traffic surges. The Imperva researchers said the emergence of pulse wave DDoS attacks indicates a significant shift in the attack landscape. “While pulse wave attacks constitute a new attack method and have a distinct purpose, they haven’t emerged in a vacuum. Instead, they’re a product of the times and should be viewed in the context of a broader shift toward shorter-duration DDoS attacks,” researchers said. The Imperva researchers predicted that such attacks will continue, becoming more persistent and growing, boosted via botnets. Source: http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/what-pulse-wave-hackers-devise-new-ddos-attack-technique-aimed-boosting-scale-assaults-1635423

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What is Pulse Wave? Hackers devise new DDoS attack technique aimed at boosting scale of assaults

Why DDoS attacks show no signs of slowing down

Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks caused substantial damage to organisations across APAC and the world in the past year. According to Neustar’s recent ‘Worldwide DDoS Attacks and Cyber Insights Research Report’, 84 percent organisations surveyed globally were hit by a DDoS attack in the last 12 months, with 86 percent of those organisations were hit multiple times. The code used to cause these large outages was published openly, and soon after all sorts of attacks and variants of the original code were causing havoc around the world. Detection is too slow DDoS attacks are not only occurring more frequently but are also getting more difficult to detect. Within APAC, more than half of organisations on average are taking at least three hours to detect an attack and nearly as many took another three hours to respond once an attack was detected. Alarmingly, slow detection and response can lead to huge damages financially. Around half of all organisations stand to lose an average of $100,000 per hour of peak downtime during an attack. To exacerbate this, 40 percent of organisations hit were notified by their customers of the attacks. Investment is increasing The worrying figures above help explain why 90 percent of organisations are increasing their investments in DDoS defences, compared to the previous 12 months – up from 76 percent last year- despite the fact that 99 percent already have some form of protection in place. The threats faced today, and those anticipated in the future, are clearly forcing organisations to completely reconsider the ways they are currently protecting themselves. Mitigating against DDOS attacks Effectively mitigating DDoS attacks has become crucial for organisations that want to avoid damaging financial and reputational loss. In order to combat attacks, organisations need to adequately understand the threat, quantify the risk and then create a mitigation plan that corresponds to their needs. Whether it’s a large or small scale DDoS attack, to keep up with the growing threat, companies will need newer, adaptable, and scalable defences that include new technology and methodologies. Developing a mitigation plan Paying the cost for a DDoS mitigation that exceeds their requirements is like over insuring your car – you are paying a premium for a service that does not match your level of risk/potential loss. Similarly, implementing a DDoS mitigation that does not cover the risk will likely lead to additional costs, resulting from greater organisational impact and additional emergency response activities. Once the severity of the risk is understood, there are three key critical elements of producing a good mitigation plan that must be enacted: detection, response and rehearsal. Detecting an attack Fortunately, there are several technologies out there that can be used to monitor both the physical and cloud-based environment. An example is how organisations can use Netflow monitoring on border routers to detect a volumetric attack, or provide this data to a third-party for analysis and detection. They can also look at using appliances to conduct automatic detection and response, again managed internally or by a third-party. In a cloud environment, organisations can choose between a vast array of cloud monitoring tools that allow them to identify degradation and performance, CPU utilisation and latency, giving an indication as accurate as possible of when an attack occurs. Responding to an attack The response plan to the attack must be scaled to the organisation’s risk exposure and technology infrastructure. For instance, an organisation operating in the cloud with a moderate risk exposure might decide on a cloud based solution, pay-on-occurrence model. On the other hand, a financial services company that operates its own infrastructure will be exposed to more substantial financial and reputational risk. Such a company would ideally look for a hybrid solution that would provide the best time to mitigate, low latency and near immediate failover to cloud mitigation for large volumetric attacks. Rehearsal of your mitigation plan Regardless of the protection method being deployed, it’s good practice to rehearse it periodically. Periodic testing can not only eliminate gaps or issues in responding to a DDoS attack, but can also prepare the responsible owners to perform their required actions when an actual event occurs. In summary, DDoS attacks aren’t showing any signs of slowing down anytime soon. The threats associated with DDoS attacks cannot be understated or underestimated. Moreover, by quantifying the risk to the organisation and implementing a right-sized mitigation solution, organisations can effectively and efficiently mitigate the risk of DDoS attacks. Source: https://securitybrief.com.au/story/why-ddos-attacks-show-no-signs-slowing-down/

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Why DDoS attacks show no signs of slowing down

World of Warcraft, Overwatch, Hearthstone and other games hit by DDoS

Games company Blizzard has reported on Twitter that: “We are currently monitoring a DDOS attack against network providers which is affecting latency/connections to our games.”  World of Warcraft, Overwatch, Hearthstone and other game servers are believed to have been hit. At about 5pm last night Blizzard noticed Down Detector – which monitors online outages  -logging a huge upsurge of problems and 2800+ reports for Overwatch, World of Warcraft and several other Blizzard gaming services. Commenting on the way that even failure to bring a service down completely has a severe impact on online games ,   Igal Zeifman, director at Imperva Incapsula said in an email to SC: “Competitive online games are an attractive target for any DDoS offender looking to create large-scale mayhem in hope of some Internet notoriety. Moreover, such gaming networks are also particularly vulnerable to denial of service assaults because, unlike many other targets, they don’t need to be taken offline to become unusable. “In the case of a real-time online game, even a small amount of  latency–as a result of a technically “failed” attacks–is enough to cause major disruption to gamers looking for a completely responsive and immersive experience. This is exactly what is happening in this case. Even if some users are able to log in, the latency they experience still makes Overwatch unplayable.” Source: https://www.scmagazineuk.com/world-of-warcraft-overwatch-hearthstone-and-other-games-hit-by-ddos/article/681508/

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World of Warcraft, Overwatch, Hearthstone and other games hit by DDoS