Tag Archives: ddos-defense

Hong Kong Student Gets Probation Time for DDoS Attack During Occupy Campaign

A judge at the Fanling Court in Hong Kong has sentenced Chu Tsun-wai, 20, of Hong Kong, to 15 months of probation for launching a DDoS attack on a Chinese bank’s website during the 2014 Hong Kong Occupy protests. The judge also ruled that the suspect’s Mac computer be confiscated as punishment for carrying out the attack, SCMP reports. Chu, who is one of the top students at his university, had decided to get involved in the Occupy protests that were taking place in Hong Kong during the autumn of 2014. Teen was inspired by one of Anonymous Asia’s videos The teen saw a video posted online by the Anonymous hacker collective, which was warning Hong Kong police to stop the violence against Hong Kong Occupy protesters. The group threatened to hack government websites and release personal information belonging to Hong Kong police officers. The group also called out for others to participate in its protests. The prosecution says that Chu went online and searched on Google for ways to carry out DDoS attacks. He launched one such DDoS attack against the Shanghai Commercial Bank’s website. Police say that the student sent 6,652 HTTP requests in 16 seconds on the bank’s website, on October 12, 2014. Bank website barely noticed the attack This sounds odd since a Web server should, in theory, be capable of handling much more than 6,000 requests per second, but Chinese authorities have come down hard on people who participated in the protests, to begin with. The judge was lenient on Chu because this was his first offense and because the bank’s website didn’t go offline. Chinese news outlet Ejinsight reports that one of Chu’s professors wrote the judge a letter asking the judge to give the suspect a second chance. Public broadcaster RTHK reported that Chu also stands to face disciplinary hearings at his university. Below is the original video that started it all, with the Anonymous group calling out for attacks against Hong Kong police officials during the Occupy protests. Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/hong-kong-student-gets-probation-time-for-ddos-attacks-during-occupy-campaign-506720.shtml

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Hong Kong Student Gets Probation Time for DDoS Attack During Occupy Campaign

Docker Cloud under fire after DDoS attacks slam DNS, knacker websites

Container biz blames downtime on traffic flood Websites running on the Docker Cloud hosted container management and deployment service were taken down by an apparent DNS outage on Monday. Reg readers and Docker Cloud support forum members complained today that their services were down or suffering intermittent outages with little explanation from Docker. One angry user got in touch with us to lambast the San Francisco startup’s customer support. “The DNS service has now been intermittently online and offline for over a day. All this from a company supposedly worth millions,” he said. “We’ve got a thread ongoing in the forums but we’ve had limited response from Docker staff. For nearly three hours the status page said everything was fine.” On the message board, ziontech, with 20 sites running on Docker Cloud, wrote: “All my dockerapp.io endpoints have gone down, DNS resolution is failing, is there an issue with these right now?” Docker was criticized for relying on users to keep each other updated on its systems’ operations. Docker Cloud is the Docker hosting service from Tutum, which Docker bought in October 2015. The purchase price was not disclosed. The Reg has asked Docker for comment and will update this piece with any response. We note that the Docker system status page was updated to read: “We have identified an unusual high load on our DNS servers that is causing some lookups to fail. We are scaling up and investigating the source of the traffic.” ® Updated to add A spokesman for Docker has been in touch to say its DNS infrastructure was flooded offline with junk traffic, resulting in outages for customers: Docker Cloud did experience an outage yesterday due to two Distributed Denial of Service attacks on the DNS. Service was restored yesterday and things are completely back to normal. Docker provided updates via the forums within an hour after the outage was discovered, which was as soon as possible based on the information they had, and continued doing so throughout the day. They also continuously updated the status at status.docker.com. Docker has taken corrective measures to ensure this situation does not occur in the future, and, most importantly, has taken steps to ensure that user applications will not be affected in the event that Docker Cloud experiences another outage. Source: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/07/19/docker_cloud_dns_outage/

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Docker Cloud under fire after DDoS attacks slam DNS, knacker websites

HSBC Website Suffers DDoS Attack

OurMine Hacking group conducted a massive DDoS attack on HSBC websites forcing the sites to go offline in UK and the USA! The official domain of HSBC (Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation) came under massive distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack on 12July affecting domain in UK and the USA. The DDoS attack was conducted by OurMine hacking group which previously made headlines for hacking social media accounts of high-profile tech celebrities including Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg and Google’s Sundar Pichai but this is the second DDoS attack  after WikiLeaks last week. Currently, the reason for targeting HSBC bank is unknown though according to SoftPedia the cyber attack was stopped within few hours after one of HSBC’s staffs contacted the attackers. “Hello, We stopped the attack of HSBC Bank! a staff of HSBC Talked with us,” stated the hackers on their official blog. Screenshot shared by attackers shows HSBC’s UK and US domains are down! It is unclear if the bank was targeted for ransom or just for fun, however, this is not the first time when HSBC faced such attacks. In January 2016 hacktivists from New World Hacktivists (NWH) claimed responsibility for a DDoS attack on HSBC’s mobile servers on payday. As far as OurMine is concerned, it is the same group who hacked  Google’s CEO Sundar Pichai Quora account which was also linked to his Twitter account, the group also hacked Facebook’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg Twitter and Pinterest accounts and last but not the least the official Twitter account of Twitter’s CEO Jack Dorsey was also taken over by the same group. DDoS attacks have been increasing with every passing day . In the past, DDoS attacks were conducted just for fun or to shut down servers but now hackers attack sites for ransom and keep them down until a ransom is paid. The ProtonMail DDoS attack is a fine example of how these attacks are becoming another online mafia to steal money. At the time of publishing this article, both targeted sites were reachable. Source: https://www.hackread.com/hsbc-website-suffers-ddos-attack/  

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HSBC Website Suffers DDoS Attack

WikiLeaks’ website was taken offline with a DDoS attack amid an ongoing hacker feud.

As a long-time feud between rival hacking groups boiled over, the WikiLeaks website was caught in the crossfire and brought offline by a distributed-denial-of-service (DDoS) attack on 5 June. However, rather than react with anger, leaked chat logs show how WikiLeaks’ Twitter account engaged the group responsible, called OurMine, and even offered hacking tips for the future. Direct messages leaked to Buzzfeed show how WikiLeaks’ account, rumoured to be helmed by the website’s founder Julian Assange, told the group – which has become known for hacking the online profiles of high-profile figures – their talents could be put to better use. OurMine has recently hacked a slew of celebrities and technology executives including Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, Google’s Sundar Pichai and Spotify founder Daniel Ek. Every time, they leave a message telling the victim how weak their security is and leave a link to their website. Indeed the group claims to be a security firm rather than a hacking outfit. In any case, as far as ‘hacks’ go, OurMine’s activity is fairly tame. Until WikiLeaks’ website was taken down – thanks to an ongoing head-to-head with the Anonymous collective – there was little real damage caused to victims other than embarrassment. The DDoS attack took down the famous whistleblowing website by sending waves of traffic towards its servers, a common tactic used in hacktivist circles as a means of protest. After the incident, WikiLeaks got in touch and said the group was wasting its time by not making the most of the chances received by infiltrating profiles of the rich and famous. “If you support us and want to show you’re skills, then don’t waste your time with DDoS etc,” the account wrote. “Find us interesting mail spools or docs and send them to [WikiLeaks]. That’ll have a much greater impact.” After OurMine replied with “We never change their passwords we are just testing their accounts’ security” WikiLeaks said it was a “huge waste.” The message continued: “There’s a lot more than (sic) could have been done with those accounts. Sending DM’s as Zuckerberg to further access elsewhere. Same with Google CEO. You could have used these accounts to gain access to much more significant information, revealing corrupt behaviour elsewhere.” Based on the chats, OurMine appeared to agree with the new direction. “Great idea,” it said. One the hackers, speaking with Wired, previously said: “We don’t need money, but we are selling security services because there is a lot [of] people [who] want to check their security. We are not blackhat hackers, we are just a security group…we are just trying to tell people that nobody is safe.” Source: http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/wikileaks-tells-ourmine-hackers-impersonate-high-profile-victims-reveal-corrupt-behaviour-1569499

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WikiLeaks’ website was taken offline with a DDoS attack amid an ongoing hacker feud.

Central banks of South Korea and Indonesia bulk up security following DDoS attacks by hacktivists

The central banks of Indonesia and South Korea are reportedly bulking up security on their public-facing websites after being hit with cyberattacks and distributed-denial-of-service (DDoS) disturbances linked to notorious hacking collective Anonymous. In response to the attempted cyberattacks, Ronald Waas, deputy governor of Bank Indonesia (BI), told Reuters his institution was forced to block 149 regions that don’t usually access its website, including “several small African countries”. The central banks of Indonesia and South Korea are reportedly bulking up security on their public-facing websites after being hit with cyberattacks and distributed-denial-of-service (DDoS) disturbances linked to notorious hacking collective Anonymous. In response to the attempted cyberattacks, Ronald Waas, deputy governor of Bank Indonesia (BI), told Reuters his institution was forced to block 149 regions that don’t usually access its website, including “several small African countries”. As previously reported, a video statement posted to YouTube on 4 May by the group said: “We will not let the banks win, we will be attacking the banks with one of the most massive attacks ever seen in the history of Anonymous.” Later, the central bank of Greece admitted its website was taken offline for a short period of time. This was followed by other banks in countries including France, England, Scotland and Sweden. In June, the hackers announced that ‘phase three’ of the operation has started – dubbed Project Mayhem – and that the focus of the campaign would change to include major stock exchanges. In any case, the global banking system has been left shaken by a number of successful hacks, breaches and cyber-heists throughout 2016. In one attack, the Bangladesh central bank was targeted by a highly coordinated team of hackers that were able to steal a massive £81m via fraudulent money transfers. Source: http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/central-banks-south-korea-indonesia-bulk-security-following-ddos-attacks-by-hacktivists-1566836

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Central banks of South Korea and Indonesia bulk up security following DDoS attacks by hacktivists

Muslim Brotherhood’s Website Suffers DDoS Attacks and Data Leak

The official English language website of Muslim Brotherhood movement was forced to go offline after facing massive DDoS attacks! Earlier today, a hacker going by the handle of SkyNetCentral conducted a series of distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack on the official website of Society of the Muslim Brothers or Muslim Brotherhood (Al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun in Arabic) forcing the website to go offline despite using CloudFlare DDoS protection service. The hacker also conducted  DDoS attacks on the official website of Freedom and Justice Party, which is an Egyptian political party affiliated with Muslim Brotherhood. That’s not all, the attacker also managed to bypass site’s security and steal Al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun’s files from the database, ending up leaking it online for public access. Upon scanning the leaked data HackRead found it to be legit and never been leaked on the internet before. The data dump contains IP addresses, email conversation, comments and commenters’ names and IP addresses. It seems as if the hacker only managed to compromise some tables of the database without getting hold of any sensitive data. The only damage that can be caused is tracing the location of the commenters but that’s not a task just anyone can perform. Here is a screenshot from the leaked data showing comments and IP addresses: At the moment, the motive behind these attacks is unclear however after going through attacker’s profile it’s evident that they have been targeting Muslim Brotherhood, Council on American-Islamic Relations – CAIR and other similar organizations. Source: https://www.hackread.com/muslim-brotherhoods-website-suffers-ddos-attacks/

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Muslim Brotherhood’s Website Suffers DDoS Attacks and Data Leak

Businesses receive another warning over the threat of DDoS attacks

We have all heard the stories of businesses which have suffered debilitating DDoS attacks and, in some cases, succumbing altogether. Take Code Spaces, the web-based SVN and Git hosting provider which suffered such an attack in June 2014 that it was forced to wave the white flag and cease trading after recovering all the data lost would cost too much. Now, a new piece of research from A10 Networks argues businesses face ‘sudden death’ from DDoS if caught unawares. The average company was hit by an average of 15 DDoS attacks per year, according to the survey of 120 IT decision makers, with larger organisations more badly affected. One in three (33%) respondents said they had encountered DDoS attacks of more than 40 Gbps, while one in five had suffered downtimes of more than 36 hours due to the attack. The average attack of those polled lasted 17 hours. More than half (54%) of respondents said they would increase their DDoS budgets in the coming six months, while multi-vector attacks were seen by the majority of those polled (77%) as the most dangerous form of DDoS threat in the future. “DDoS attacks are called ‘sudden death’ for good reason. If left unaddressed, the costs will include business, time to service restoration and a decline in customer satisfaction,” said A10 Networks CTO Raj Jalan. He added: “The good news is our findings show that security teams are making DDoS prevention a top priority. With a better threat prevention system, they can turn an urgent business threat into an FYI-level notification.” Previous research has examined the growing sophistication of DDoS threats. In April, Neustar argued that such DDoS issues were “unrelenting”, with more than seven in 10 global brands polled having been subject to an attack. Source: http://www.appstechnews.com/news/2016/jun/16/businesses-receive-another-warning-over-threat-ddos-attacks/

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Businesses receive another warning over the threat of DDoS attacks

DNS attacks cost businesses more than $1 million a year

New research has revealed that DNS attacks are costing businesses more than $1 million a year in lost business and service downtime. For years, DNS has silently and peacefully served internet needs, but it’s mostly been thought of as a trivial protocol requiring very basic configuration and monitoring. Despite its criticality, this service has never really been considered as a potential security issue, mostly because common usage leads people to believe it is a trivial protocol requiring very basic confguration and monitoring. But while DNS may have been safe and apparently secure for the last twenty years, because of its complexity and evolving role in the IT industry it has become a powerful attack vector, with 91% of malware using the DNS protocol. According to the new study from IDC and EfficientIP , the top three DNS attacks that have the largest impact on an organisation are Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS attacks, Zero-Day vulnerabilities and data exfiltration. These types of attacks are the main cause of business outage and data theft. But despite 74% being victims of DNS attacks, 25% of businesses still aren’t implementing any kind of basic security software. EfficientIP’s experts warn that existing DNS defenses are outdated and no longer work. Until now, the approach to IT Security has been one that has downplayed the risk of DNS threats, bundling them in with a wide selection of diferent network threats that can be protected using traditional security tools and techniques. It is an approach that threatens DNS security by overcomplicating architectures, adding slow and inappropriate layers of defence. While firewalls can protect on a basic level, on their own they;re not designed to deal with high bandwidth DDoS attacks, or detect DNS tunnelling attempts (the majority of DDoS attacks are now over 1Gbps), and most businesses still rely on the ‘out-of-the-box’ non-secure DNS servers offered by Microsoft or Linux servers. ‘The report has highlighted that despite the massive increase in cyber attacks, companies and their IT departments still don’t fully appreciate the risks from DNS-based attacks,’ said David Williamson, EfficientIP CEO. ‘In just under two years GDPR will come into effect and companies will be held responsible for all security breaches and could face major fines. It’s crucial for all businesses to start taking DNS security seriously.’ Source: http://www.information-age.com/technology/security/123461604/dns-attacks-cost-businesses-more-1-million-year-study

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DNS attacks cost businesses more than $1 million a year

Defending against DDoS-Day

It was tax time in Australia, 2014, and one Sydney tax agent, like many others across the country, was all-hands-on-deck as staff took endless calls and filled appointment diaries. The frantic pace was welcomed at the young firm, which prided itself on being hip, casual, and cool. The firm’s slick, mobile-friendly website and a good search engine ranking brought a decent rush of new clients to the firm each year. So when the site went on- and offline over the course of a week, phones stopped ringing and staff panicked. The firm was on the receiving end of a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack from IP addresses out of Eastern Europe that overwhelmed the small business IT infrastructure. An email in the company’s generic inbox demanded that US$1,000 be wired to a Western Union account in order for the attacks to stop. “We called our tech guys and they tried to block it,” a senior tax accountant told CRN on condition of anonymity. “We called the cops, but no-one could fix it quickly enough so we paid.” The price was cheap compared to the damage wrought. And fears that the criminals would just ask for more money once the ransom was paid were unfounded; the attacks stopped abruptly and no more was heard from them. Booters and stressers When a dam threatens to breach, it helps to have a network of diversion channels where the water can flow away from the towns below. So it is that a wave of DDoS packets can be soaked up by throwing large networks in front of the target. The floods are becoming more common, but their nature is changing to something more efficient and dangerous than in previous years. Akamai’s latest release of the popular State of the Internet report for the last quarter of 2015 finds a 149 percent increase in total DDoS attacks and a 169 percent increase in infrastructure layer attacks over the same period in 2014. The “vast majority” of these attacks were from so-called booter or stresser providers, the DDoS-for-hire services that operate with a gossamer-thin veil of legitimacy for customers who pay hourly to monthly rates to point the attacks at their own infrastructure. Of course, many who use the services point the booters at rival businesses, governments and, notably, live-stream gaming video channels operated by rivals. These attacks have “increased dramatically”, Akamai says, compared to the preceding three months, with use of network timing attacks that power the booters up by 57 percent on the previous quarter. Such attacks abuse the network timing protocol so a small query generates a large response, which is redirected at a target. “Network Time Protocol amplification attacks have be used in large-scale DDoS attacks peaking shy of 400Gbps, but DNS amplification attacks have also been successfully used to cripple infrastructure and cause serious financial losses,” BitDefender senior threat analyst Adrian Liviu Arsene says. “One of the largest DDoS attack to date was reported to have reached around 500Gbps, although the standard is somewhere around 100Gbps.” Motive and intent Distributed denial-of-service is the second most likely digital attack to be familiar to the average pedestrian after viruses. The method of attack hit mainstream headlines some six years ago, when online activist group Anonymous brought down major websites, including Paypal, the Recording Industry Association of America and the sites of Canberra public agencies. Systematic arrests followed, bursting the bubble of those participants who thought safety in numbers would shield their IP addresses from being singled out by police. It signalled a fall in popularity of DDoS as a means of protest. The criminal undercurrent remains and here cash is king, but motivations still vary. Businesses use DDoS attacks to knock off rivals and criminals to send sites offline until a ransom is paid. Yet others use the digital flood as a diversion to distract security defenders and set off alarms while they hack into back-end systems. One group known as DDoS for Bitcoin, or DDoS4BC, is using the proven anonymity of the crypto-currency to extort companies through DDoS. It is a safer model for criminals than that which ripped through the Sydney tax accountancy, and considerably more expensive for victims. It is, as of January, known to have hit more than 150 companies around the world, first sending an extortion note demanding between AU$5,600 and a whopping AU$112,000 in Bitcoins before launching small DDoS attacks to demonstrate the group’s capabilities. For some victims, the DDoS may be short-lived and devoid of any apparent motive, according to Verizon Enterprise Solutions investigative response managing principal Ashish Thapar. “We have definitely seen DDoS on the rise and several of our partners are logging double the [usual] number of incidents,” Thapar says. “We are also seeing DDoS attacks bringing companies them to their knees but not entirely offline, which acts as a smokescreen for advanced persistent threat attacks at the back end.” That’s also something Secure Logic chief executive officer Santosh Devaraj has seen. The company hosts iVote, the electronic voting system for NSW, and last year bagged the $990,000 contract to operate it until 2020. “There are ‘DDoS for hire’ groups we’ve seen as part of monitoring iVote that may be trying to gain access to infrastructure at the back,” Devaraj says. “The real threat may not be the DDoS.” DDoS down under Australian businesses are less targeted than those overseas, experts agree, thanks in part to our smaller internet pipes. But with the NBN rolling out, DDoS Down Under is expected to become big. The midmarket is likely to be hit harder, BitDefender’s Arsene says. “Midmarket DDoS attacks are likely to rise as the chances of targets actually paying are higher than for other organisations,” he says. “[Criminals] specifically target midmarket companies that don’t have the technical resources to fend off such attacks.” Akamai chief strategist John Ellis agrees, saying extortionists “tend to hit the sites with a large online presence”. “For cyber adversaries, the [midmarket] provides a fantastic target,” Ellis adds. “A Sydney developer team that relies heavily in online app availability, for example, may have to seriously consider whether it rolls over and pays DDoS extortionists.” The attacks in Australia are, for now, fairly small. “We are seeing bigger DDoS attacks, but they’re nowhere near the size of attacks in the US,” says Melbourne IT cloud and mobile solutions general manager Peter Wright.  “It is partly because infrastructure and bandwidth limitations reduce the size of DDoS attacks. It is an attribute of infrastructure capacity and there is a risk that, as we broaden the pipes [as part of the National Broadband Network], it brings huge benefits but increases the risk profile as well.” Sinking feeling Big banks are smashed by DDoS attacks every day and largely do not bat an eyelid. Online gambling companies, too, across Australia are blasted during big sporting events. These top end of town players have expensive, tried-and-tested scrubbing mechanisms to largely neuter DDoS attacks, although some betting agencies are known to have regularly paid off attackers during the Melbourne Cup, treating it as a cost of business. The midmarket is not left to its own devices, however. Hosting providers like Melbourne IT and others offer DDoS protection against applications and services, while other companies have cheaper offerings for the budget market. “I am sympathetic to the midmarket, their need for bang-for-buck,” Ellis says. “The challenge for the midmarket is that they don’t have the money that they need… they should focus on business outcomes and partners who understand their business and design outcomes.” For Secure Logic’s Devaraj, DDoS mitigation comes down to a solid cyber security operations centre. “It is where I believe the industry should invest, rather than a particular technology.” Yet companies can use free or cheap DDoS protection from the likes of CloudFlare, or opt for do-it-yourself options that require hardening of security defences – something the average small technology shop may lack the ability to do. “There are DDoS sinkholes and capabilities with our cloud partners,” Wright says. “If a resource or function is hit, we can move workloads to other resources dynamically.” Arsene agrees. “Midmarket tech guys need to start by incorporating DDoS attack risks into their corporate security strategies. Using a secure and managed DNS that supports changing internet protocols on the fly is also recommended, as well as patching software vulnerabilities to mitigate application layer attacks.” Source: http://www.crn.com.au/feature/defending-against-ddos-day-419470/page1 http://www.crn.com.au/feature/defending-against-ddos-day-419470/page2

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Defending against DDoS-Day

BitGo Under DDoS Attack; Wirex Advises Customers Not To Use Platform

Wirex, a bitcoin debit card provider, sent an email to customers today advising them to avoid making transactions on the Wirex platform until it could confirm from thatBitGo services have been resumed. The message included a BitGo tweet advising users it was under a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack. BitGo is a wallet and a security platform for bitcoin and blockchain technologies. “We, therefore, recommend to avoid making any transactions via E-Coin/Wirex platform until confirmation from BitGo that the services have been resumed,” the Wirex email noted. The BitGo tweet stated: “We apologize for the issue, but we’re under DDOS attack at this moment. We’re working on it and will keep you updated.” Wirex is a wallet service that provides both physical and virtual bitcoin debit cards. Wirex users were able to send bitcoin from within the BitGo Instant network. BitGo Offers Instant Settlement Wirex uses the BitGo Instant service, which provides immediate settlement of bitcoin transactions, CCN reported in February. There was nothing on the BitGo blog about the attack at the time of this report. BitGo’s service eliminates the “double spend” potentiality in bitcoin transactions. The service is for users seeking instant bitcoin transactions while securing funds against the possibility that the sender will spend the money elsewhere before the transaction gets confirmed via the blockchain. BitGo provides immediate transaction settlement using the crypto keys among participating users’ wallets. BitGo Gains A Following Other cryptocurrency exchanges and apps offering BitGo Instant include Bitstamp, Bitfinex, Unocoin, Kraken and the Fold app. There have been several DDoS attacks bitcoin wallets and exchanges in recent months. Bitcoin and alt.coins exchange BTC-e suffered a DDoS attack in January. BTCC, the Shanghai, China-based digital currency exchange, suffered a DDoS attack at the end of last year. OkCoin, another exchange, was also the target of a DDoS attack in July. Source: https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/bitgo-ddos-wirex-advisory/

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BitGo Under DDoS Attack; Wirex Advises Customers Not To Use Platform