Tag Archives: denial of service attack

Gartner: Despite the DDoS attacks, don’t give up on Dyn or DNS service providers

Enterprises going it alone against such an attack ‘would have been toast The DDoS attacks that flooded Dyn last month and knocked some high-profile Web sites offline don’t mean businesses should abandon it or other DNS  service  providers, Gartner says. In fact, the best way to go is to make sure critical Web sites are backed by more than one DNS provider, says Gartner analyst Bob Gill. It’s also the easiest way for an enterprise to defend against this type of attack and the only one known to be  effective . “There’s nothing more elegant anyone has come up with in the intervening week,” he says. The high-volume, high-velocity attack was based largely on a botnet backed by Mirai malware that finds and infects internet of things devices that are virtually defenseless against it. It has proven capable of DDoS traffic of 1Tbps or more and the source code has been made public, so experts say it’s certain there will be more such attacks. Before the Dyn attacks, DNS services were considered vastly more reliable in-house DNS, and it still should be, Gill says. “If an enterprise had been hit with the volume Dyn was they would have been toast,” Gill says. He says he has been briefed by Dyn about the Oct. 21-22 attacks, most of which he can’t discuss publicly. But he says those Dyn customers that recovered quickly were those who dual-sourced their DNS service. “A significant number of Dyn customers popped back up after 10 to 15 minutes,” he says, and likely they were the ones with more than one DNS provider. Downsides of multiple providers is they represent an extra expense and not all providers offer exactly similar  features such as telemetry, local-based routing and fault tolerance. So switching from one to another in an emergency might be complicated and might mean winding up with a different set of features. Coordinating multiple providers is an added headache. If cost is a concern, businesses could use a DNS provider like Amazon Web Service’s Route 53 that is inexpensive, relatively easy to set up and pay-as-you-go, he says. Gill says the motivation for the attack is hard to know. Dyn was a very attractive target for many possible reasons. It had advertised its security, and that might have been considered a reason for a glory-seeking attacker to go after it and take it down. A Dyn researcher delivered a paper on the links between DDoS mitigation firms and DDoS attacks the day before Dyn was hit, so perhaps the attack was revenge. Dyn has many high-profile customers, so perhaps the real target was one of them. It’s impossible to know for sure what the motive was. Gill says Dyn has learned a great deal about how to successfully mitigate this new class of attack. In general, after such incidents, providers ally themselves with other providers to help identify and block malicious traffic at the edges between their networks. Attacks may result in identifying new profiles of attack traffic that make it easier to sort out bad from good in future incidents. Source: http://www.networkworld.com/article/3137456/security/gartner-despite-the-ddos-attacks-don-t-give-up-on-dyn-or-dns-service-providers.html

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Gartner: Despite the DDoS attacks, don’t give up on Dyn or DNS service providers

Twitter, Amazon, other top websites shut in cyber attack

Major internet services including Twitter, Spotify and Amazon suffered service interruptions and outages on Friday as a US internet provider came under a cyber attack. The internet service company Dyn, which routes and manages internet traffic, said that it had suffered a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack on its domain name service shortly after 1100 GMT. The service was restored in about two hours, Dyn said. The attack meant that millions of internet users could not access the websites of major online companies such as Netflix and Reddit as well as the crafts marketplace Etsy and the software developer site Github, according to media reports. The website Gizmodo said it had received reports of difficulty at sites for media outlets including CNN, The Guardian, Wired, HBO and People as well as the money transfer service PayPal. Dyn, which is headquartered in New Hampshire, said the attack went after its domain name service, causing interruptions and slowdowns for internet users. “This morning, October 21, Dyn received a global DDoS attack on our Managed DNS infrastructure in the east coast of the United States,” Scott Hilton, executive vice president for products at Dyn, said in a statement. “We have been aggressively mitigating the DDoS attack against our infrastructure.” The company said it was continuing to investigate. A map published by the website downdetector.com showed service interruptions for Level3 Communications, a so-called “backbone” internet service provider, across much of the US east coast and in Texas. Amazon Web Services, which hosts some of the most popular sites on the internet, including Netflix and the homestay network Airbnb, said on its website that users experienced errors including “hostname unknown” when attempting to access hosted sites but that the problem had been resolved by 1310 GMT. Domain name servers are a crucial element of internet infrastructure, converting numbered Internet Protocol addresses into the domain names that allow users to connect to internet sites. Distributed denial of service or DDoS attacks involve flooding websites with traffic, making them difficult to access or taking them offline entirely. Attackers can use them for a range of purposes, including censorship, protest and extortion. The loose-knit hacktivist network Anonymous in 2010 targeted the DNS provider EveryDNS among others in 2010 as retribution for denying service to the anti-secrecy organization WikiLeaks. “The internet continues to rely on protocols and infrastructure designed before cyber security was an issue,” said Ben Johnson, a former engineer at the National Security Agency and founder of the cybersecurity company Carbon Black. He said that growing interconnection of ordinary devices to the internet, the so-called “internet of things,” increased the risks to networks. “DDoS, especially with the rise of insecure IOT devices, will continue to plague our organizations. Sadly, what we are seeing is only the beginning in terms of large scale botnets and disproportionate damage done.” Source: http://phys.org/news/2016-10-twitter-spotify-websites-ddos.html

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Twitter, Amazon, other top websites shut in cyber attack

Ubisoft’s Servers Have Been Down For Several Hours, Could Be DDoS

Since early this morning gamers have reported server issues when playing Ubisoft games across all platforms. Ubisoft Support has confirmed the problem, sharing that it is affecting all its services, including its digital shop and official website. Ubisoft has provided the  following updates  regarding the issue: [12:44PM EDT]  We are still looking into this issue. We appreciate your understanding in the meantime.? [1:12PM EDT] Our shop and websites are also affected by this issue. We are still investigating further. Thank you for your patience thus far. Although for some of Ubisoft’s games this is a mere inconvenience, multiplayer-oriented games are currently unplayable. This has resulted in thousands of posts on Twitter directed at Ubisoft, requesting when the problem will be fixed. There is currently no ETA. It is unclear what the root cause of the issue is, although this type of problem usually happens due to DDoS.  Source: http://www.gamerevolution.com/news/ubisofts-servers-have-been-down-for-several-hours-could-be-ddos-37913

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Ubisoft’s Servers Have Been Down For Several Hours, Could Be DDoS

A Decade of DDoS Education: What’s Changed and What’s Stayed the Same

While Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks have been around for over 20 years, they have only become well-known to the majority of enterprises over the past ten years or so. Ten years ago, many enterprise IT teams only had a vague idea of what a DDoS attack was because they noticed the common symptoms “our website is down,” “the firewall crashed,” “nothing works” etc. The average IT team in 2006 would not have been aware of the techniques DDoS attacks typically used like spoofed addresses or POST floods. In order to provide a true understanding of what DDoS attacks were and how enterprises could defend against them, some basic education had to happen. In 2006 that meant putting it in terms that everyone understood, “what would happen to our meeting if we tried fitting 100 people in this room?” Eventually as education continued and attacks grew in notoriety, the basics of DDoS became common knowledge in the industry. But DDoS in its nature is an evolving threat and as application-layer attacks became predominant more education was needed. Application-layer attacks are not about blocking access to the door of the meeting room anymore, now we had to explain the stealthy nature of low-volume, targeted attacks. “So you’ve let two of us in this meeting room because we appear to be legitimate salespeople, but now we’re going to unplug the projector so you can’t run your meeting properly.” Now ten years later, the majority of enterprise IT teams have a solid understanding of the threat DDoS poses and the basics of defense but even today we still come across people who believe they can protect themselves against DDoS attacks by simply increasing their bandwidth or relying on their firewalls or unified threat management appliances. With the volume of attacks today that is definitely not enough to ensure service and network availability in the face of sustained DDoS attacks. The majority of DDoS education today has shifted from learning about the attack methods themselves to the correct defense techniques and processes. Even with the significant improvements in DDoS education and awareness, a lot of people still have unrealistic expectations that once they install a DDoS mitigation solution their job is done. There is no silver bullet against DDoS attacks. There is no magic box, there is no “set it and forget it” solution. You still have to educate the user. Part of this comes from the misconception that DDoS attacks are launched by untalented kids. While that is true in some cases, many enterprise IT teams are surprised to find themselves often fighting against talented opponents who are often smarter than them, have more time than them and whose effort to start attacks is minuscule compared to their effort in blocking them. Often times, when faced with these advanced adversaries, IT teams are quickly overwhelmed. Even though they have some mitigation tools in place, they may not have the  right  tools. They may not know who to call or recognize the type of attack targeting their systems. In short, they don’t have a technology problem, they have a people and process problem. Think of DDoS defense like a NASCAR race, you have a super-powerful car (your DDoS mitigation solution or service), but if you don’t know how to drive over 70 mph, you’re going to crash and hurt yourself very quickly. And let’s not even mention what happens if you decided to install that cheap transmission because it was half-off. Enterprise IT teams need to focus on building the best car they can, hiring a skilled team that can keep the car in its best possible condition and then hiring the best driver they can afford to drive the car when the time comes. Even if you have the best car in the world, an unskilled maintenance team or driver will lead to a third or fourth place finish at the end of the season. But if you want to win the championship, you need the best car, mechanics and driver you can afford. Moving on from the NASCAR analogy, this means: Understanding the technology that best fits your needs: on-premise, always-on, protection or an on-demand service? Customizing that technology to fit your assets. Is it just your website or the services you provide from it? What about defending your corporate network? Identifying and training a team that is capable of understanding all of the procedures in all possible scenarios that surround a DDoS attack. Continue evolving your mitigation strategy. Keep your technology state-of-the-art and provide continuous training for your team. If you follow these steps you’ll end up in the winner’s circle after mitigating another DDoS attack and not in pit row trying to figure out what went wrong. Source: http://wwpi.com/2016/10/12/a-decade-of-ddos-education-whats-changed-and-whats-stayed-the-same/

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A Decade of DDoS Education: What’s Changed and What’s Stayed the Same

How the ‘Internet of unpatchable things’ leads to DDoS attacks

For at least the past year there have been repeated warning to makers of Internet-connected devices about the insecurity of their platforms. Another came today in a report from Akamai Technologies’ threat research team, which has delved into a recent burst of distributed attacks leveraging IoT devices. In this case they are SSHowDowN Proxy attacks using a 12-year old vulnerability in OpenSSH. “We’re entering a very interesting time when it comes to DDoS and other web attacks — ‘The Internet of Unpatchable Things’ so to speak,” Eric Kobrin, Akamai’s director of information security, said in a statement. “New devices are being shipped from the factory not only with this vulnerability exposed, but also without any effective way to fix it. We’ve been hearing for years that it was theoretically possible for IoT devices to attack. That, unfortunately, has now become the reality.” Akamai emphasizes this isn’t a new vulnerability or attack technique. But it does show a continued weakness in many default configurations of Internet-connected devices. These particular attacks have leveraged video surveillance cameras and digital recorders, satellite antenna equipment, networking devices (including routers, switches, Wi-Fi hotspots and modems) and Internet-connected network attached storage. They are being used to mount attacks on any Internet targets as well as internal networks that host connected devices. Unauthorized SSH tunnels were created and used, despite the fact that the IoT devices were supposedly hardened and do not allow the default web interface user to SSH into the device and execute commands, Akamai said. Then attackers used to conduct a mass-scale HTTP-based credential stuffing campaigns against Akamai customers. It offers this mitigation advice to infosec pros: –if possible configure the SSH passwords or keys on devices and change those to passwords or keys that are different from the vendor defaults; –configure the device’s SSH service on your device and either add “AllowTcpForwarding No” and “no-port-forwarding” and “no-X11-forwarding” to the ~/ssh/authorized_ keys file for all users, or disable SSH entirely via the device’s administration console; –if the device is behind a firewall, consider disabling inbound connections from outside the network to port 22 of any deployed IoT devices, or disabling outbound connections from IoT devices except to the minimal set of ports and IP addresses required for their operation. Source: http://www.itworldcanada.com/article/how-the-internet-of-unpatchable-things-leads-to-ddos-attacks/387275

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How the ‘Internet of unpatchable things’ leads to DDoS attacks

73% of organisations across the globe have suffered a DDoS attack

A new report from analytics firm Neustar has brought to light the amount of companies around the world who have suffered a DDoS attack, and how they are working to mitigate them. Nearly three-quarters (73 percent) of organisations worldwide have suffered a DDoS attack and 76 percent are investing more in response to the threat of such attacks.  For its new global report, Neustar studied 1,002 directors, managers, CISOs, CSOs, CTOs and other C-suite executives to discover how DDoS attacks are affecting them and what they’re doing to mitigate the threat. Respondents represent diverse industries such as technology (18 percent), finance (14 percent), retail (12 percent) and government (seven percent) in North America, EMEA, and Asia Pacific. In EMEA, 75 percent of organisations were attacked. Nearly half (48 percent) were attacked six or more time and 32 percent encountered malware after a DDoS attack. Almost a quarter (21 percent) of attacked organisations reported customer data theft and 70 percent of those specific respondents said they learned of the attack from outside sources, such as social media. Globally, 30 percent of organisations took less than an hour to detect a DDoS attacks. In  EMEA, 37 percent of organisations took three or more hours to detect attacks. Despite only two percent of reported attacks exceeding 100+ GBPS, recent DDoS attacks have reached over 620 Gbps and up to almost 1 Tbps in attack size. Organisations are seeking to stay one step ahead of the game and protect against DDoS attacks. To prevent and protect against future attacks, organisations are using: Traditional firewall ISP based prevention (53 percent) Cloud service provider (47 percent) On-premise DDoS appliance and a DDoS mitigation service (36 percent) DDoS mitigation service (29 percent) DDoS mitigation appliance (27 percent) CDN (14 percent) WAF (13 percent) No DDoS protection is used in four percent of organisations. Nearly two-thirds (61 percent) have adopted and actively use IoT devices. In all, 82 percent of IoT adopters experienced an attack compared to just 58 percent of those who have not yet done so. Moreover, 43 percent of IoT adopters that were attacked are investing more than they did a year ago. In emailed commentary to  SCMagazineUK .com, Paul McEvatt, senior cyber-threat intelligence manager, UK & Ireland at Fujitsu said, “This latest report revealing the different levels of DDoS attacks has really highlighted the issues with the security of Internet of Things devices, with 82 percent of IoT adopters having experienced an attack compared with just 58 percent of those who have not yet done so. When internet-connected devices are hacked, it again brings to the surface the security risks we face as technology touches every aspect of daily life.  McEvatt added, “The issue is that businesses are failing to understand what is needed for a robust application of security from the outset, whether that’s for routers, smart devices or connected cars. Various attackers use online services to look for vulnerable IoT devices, making organisations an easy target for low-level cyber-criminals. The worrying reality is that security is often an afterthought and security fundamentals are still not being followed such as changing default passwords. Many of the cameras used in the recent DDoS attacks were shipped and left connected to the internet with weak credentials such as root/pass, root/admin or root/1111111, so it is little wonder these devices continue to be compromised.” Source: http://www.scmagazineuk.com/73-of-organisations-across-the-globe-have-suffered-a-ddos-attack/article/527211/

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73% of organisations across the globe have suffered a DDoS attack

Expect ‘Flood’ of DDoS Attacks After Source Code Release

The source code behind the massive distributed denial of service attack against security researcher Brian Krebs’s website has been released online. In a blog post over the weekend, Krebs wrote that the so-called Mirai source code’s release pretty much guarantees that “the Internet will soon be flooded with attacks from many new botnets powered by insecure routers, IP cameras, digital video recorders, and other easily hackable devices.”  Krebs knows all too well what Mirai is capable of. Last month, the “Internet of Things” botnet launched a “historically large” 620Gbps DDoS attack against his well-known and respected site KrebsOnSecurity, inundating it with so much spam traffic that DDoS protection provider Akamai dropped the site to protect other subscribers. The Mirai source code leak came to light on Friday via the Hackforums community, Krebs said. A user with the alias “anna-senpai” posted the code there for anyone to use, likely to avoid getting caught. “It’s an open question why anna-senpai released the source code for Mirai, but it’s unlikely to have been an altruistic gesture: Miscreants who develop malicious software often dump their source code publicly when law enforcement investigators and security firms start sniffing around a little too close to home,” Krebs wrote. “Publishing the code online for all to see and download ensures that the code’s original authors aren’t the only ones found possessing it if and when the authorities come knocking with search warrants.” The malware spreads by “continuously scanning the Internet for [vulnerable] IoT systems” that are using default or hard-coded usernames and passwords. Vulnerable devices are then turned into bots, which together can be used to launch DDoS attacks designed to send so much traffic to a website that it’s knocked offline. “My guess is that (if it’s not already happening) there will soon be many Internet users complaining to their ISPs about slow Internet speeds as a result of hacked IoT devices on their network hogging all the bandwidth,” Krebs wrote. “On the bright side, if that happens it may help to lessen the number of vulnerable systems.” Source: http://www.pcmag.com/news/348404/expect-flood-of-ddos-attacks-after-source-code-release

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Expect ‘Flood’ of DDoS Attacks After Source Code Release

Newsweek Website Suffers DDoS Attack After Publishing Controversial Trump Report

Newsweek reported suffering a massive DDoS attack right after they published an exposé on how some of Donald Trump’s companies had violated the United States embargo on trading with Cuba. The attack was sufficient to prevent access to the article on Friday, September 30, but the attack subsided, and the report was available the following day. Kurt Eichenwald, the journalist that penned the piece, and Jim Impoco, Newsweek Editor-in-Chief, both categorized the incident as a cyber-attack. “The reason ppl couldnt read #TrumpInCuba piece late yesterday is that hackers launched a major attack on Newsweek after it was posted,” Eichenwald wrote on Twitter. “Last night we were on the receiving end of what our IT chief called a ‘massive’ DoS (denial of service) attack,” Impoco told fellow media outlet TalkingPointMemo (TPM) via email. Some websites that generate enough hype can suffer from huge traffic loads that overcome servers. Nevertheless, Newsweek is a reputable news portal that has the resources to deal with such traffic spikes. Impoco was very adamant that the incident was because of a coordinated DDoS attack, which he claims might have originated from Russia, but did not elaborate beyond explaining that the DDoS attack’s “main” IP address was from Russia. This explanation doesn’t make any technical sense since DDoS attacks don’t have “main” IP addresses.           Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/newsweek-website-suffers-ddos-attack-after-publishing-controversial-trump-report-508874.shtml

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Newsweek Website Suffers DDoS Attack After Publishing Controversial Trump Report

Why a massive DDoS attack on a blogger has internet experts worried

Someone on the internet seems very angry with cybersecurity blogger Brian Krebs. On 20 September, Krebs’ website was hit with what experts say is the biggest Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack in public internet history, knocking it offline for days with a furious 600 to 700 Gbps (Gigabits per second) traffic surge. DDoS attacks are a simple way of overloading a network router or server with so much traffic that it stops responding to legitimate requests. According to Akamai (which had the unenviable job of attempting to protect his site last week), the attack was twice the size of any DDoS event the firm had ever seen before, easily big enough to disrupt thousands of websites let alone one. So why did someone expend time and money to attack a lone blogger in such a dramatic way? Krebs has his own theories, and the attack follows Krebs breaking a story about the hacking and subsequent takedown of kingpin DDoS site vDOS, but in truth nobody knows for certain and probably never will. DDoS attacks, large and small, have become a routine fact of internet life. Many attacks are quietly damped down by specialist firms who protect websites and internet services. But the latest attack has experts worried all the same. Stop what you’re doing DDoS attacks first emerged as an issue on the public internet in the late 1990s, and since then have been getting larger, more complex and more targeted. Early motivations tended towards spiteful mischief. A good example is the year 2000 attacks on websites including Yahoo, CNN and Amazon by ‘MafiaBoy’, who later turned out to be 15-year old Canadian youth Michael Calce. Within weeks, he was arrested. Things stepped up a level in 2008 when hacktivist group Anonymous started an infamous series of DDoS attacks with one aimed at websites belonging to the Church of Scientology. By then, professional cybercriminals were offering DDoS-for-hire ‘booter’ and ‘stresser’ services that could be rented out to unscrupulous organizations to attack rivals. Built from armies of ordinary PCs and servers that had quietly been turned into botnet ‘zombies’ using malware, attacks suddenly got larger. This culminated in 2013 with a massive DDoS attack on a British spam-fighting organization called Spamhaus that was measured at a then eye-popping 300Gbps. These days, DDoS is now often used in extortion attacks where cybercriminals threaten organizations with crippling attacks on their websites unless a ransom is paid. Many are inclined to pay up. The Krebs effect The discouraging aspect of the Krebs attack is that internet firms may have thought they were finally getting on top of DDoS at last using techniques that identify rogue traffic and more quickly cut off the botnets that fuel their packet storms. The apparent ease with which the latest massive attack was summoned suggests otherwise. In 2015, Naked Security alumnus and blogger Graham Cluley suffered a smaller DDoS attack on his site so Krebs is not alone. Weeks earlier, community site Mumsnet experienced a DDoS attack designed to distract security engineers as part of a cyberattack on the firm’s user database. At the weekend, Google stepped in and opened its Project Shield umbrella over Krebs’ beleaguered site. Project Shield is a free service launched earlier in 2016 by Google, specifically to protect small websites such as Krebs’ from being silenced by DDoS attackers. For now it looks like Google’s vast resources were enough to ward off the unprecedented attack, but it’s little comfort to know that nothing short of the internet’s biggest player was the shield that one simple news site needed. With criminals apparently able to call up so much horsepower, the wizards of DDoS defence might yet have to rethink their plans – and fast. Source: https://nakedsecurity.sophos.com/2016/09/29/why-a-massive-ddos-attack-on-a-blogger-has-internet-experts-worried/

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Why a massive DDoS attack on a blogger has internet experts worried

Waiting for DDoS

In football, many offensive plays are designed to trick the defense into thinking something else is about to unfold. In the world of cybersecurity, DoS (Denial of Service) or DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attacks often serve as a similar smokescreen or decoy to a far more sinister plot with the ulterior motive to mount a computer network breach that results in the loss of data or intellectual property. It was a DDoS attack that woke up Sony Pictures a year ago (watch the video emailed to Sony employees on the morning of the attack), even though attackers had infiltrated the company’s networks months before undetected, and eventually obliterated its computer systems. According to  Fortune , half of Sony’s global network was wiped out, erasing everything stored on 3,262 of the company’s 6,797 personal computers and 837 of its 1,555 servers. Hackers calling themselves “#GOP” (Guardians of Peace) threatened to release publicly Sony Pictures’ internal data if their demands, including “monetary compensation,” were not met. They weren’t bluffing. Sobering DDoS Statistics Recent studies show DDoS attacks growing exponentially in recent years, launched through rentable, relatively inexpensive, anonymous botnets that cost as little as $1,000 and can render an e-commerce website completely inoperable. The average denial of service (DoS) attack costs the victim $1.5 million, according to a separate Ponemon Institute survey sponsored by Akamai and published in March 2015. The 682 responding companies reported four attacks a year. AT&T also reported companies across its network were hit with four times a year with DDoS attacks and 62 percent growth in DDoS attacks over the past two years. Once an organization receives a DDoS attack, the chances of being the object of a data breach are better than 70 percent, reported Neustar Inc., a Sterling, Va.-based provider of cloud-based information services, including conducting research on cloud metrics and managing various top-level internet domains. The second quarter of 2015 set a record for the number of DDoS attacks recorded on Akamai’s Prolexic Routed network – more than double what was reported in 2014’s second quarter. Corero Networks, a Hudson, Mass.-based security services provider, reported that its clients were getting DDoS attacks an average of three times a day, and in the second quarter of 2015 daily attack volume reached an average of 4.5 attacks, a 32 percent increase from the previous quarter. More than 95 percent of the attacks combated by Corero last 30 minutes or less, and the vast majority of the attacks were less than 1 Gbps. Only 43 percent rate their organizations as highly effective in quickly containing DoS attacks, and only 14 percent claimed to have had the ability to prevent such attacks, according to the Ponemon report. The worst DDoS attack on the Akamai network peaked at 214 million packets per second (Mpps), a volume capable of taking out tier 1 routers, such as those used by internet service providers (ISPs). “It’s pretty hard to stay one step ahead of these guys,” admits Mark Tonnesen, chief information officer (CIO) and chief security officer (CSO) of Neustar. In a recent survey of 760 security professionals commissioned by Neustar and conducted by Simply Direct of Sudbury, Mass., for the U.S. market and Harris Interactive of London for the Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) markets,  DDoS attacks increased in 2015 six-fold when compared to the previous year. “Every day there’s an announcement of some [DDoS attack] going on with a company caught unprepared, trying to ramp up with people and technology,” Tonnesen says. “Companies are looking for any way they can grab an edge any way in identification, detection and reaction time to eliminate the attack.” Interruption vs. Outage Those behind DDoS attacks may have ulterior motives to capture real value from the attack, such as financial gain, brand carnage, or intellectual property resold on the underground market. Any of those scenarios happen nine out of every 10 DDoS attacks, according to Neustar data. The impact on a company’s customers and the firm’s bottom line “negatively impacts everybody’s financials,” Tonnsesen points out. DDoS attacks, which can take the form of an interruption or the more serious outage, almost always serves as a smokescreen avoiding attention to an outright sinister data breach. Meanwhile, the IT staff is trying to figure out why the website isn’t working properly. “Unbeknownst to you, [the malware is] already in your network,” he explains. A DDoS  outage  is a complete slaughter of messaging to a network, such as an e-commerce platform. Effectively, the network appears to shut down completely due to the bandwidth overload, making it nearly impossible to get traffic through to the website. In contrast, a DDoS  interruption  involves attacks targeted such as to a customer service organization or intellectual property or customer records and identity. “[An interruption] certainly has a major impact, but it wouldn’t be an outage,” explains Tonnesen. “It’s more of a disruption, not a flat-out attack. The attackers are much more intelligent and organized; they know what they’re certainly looking for, such as affecting your brand and or having a financial impact. There’s an element of showcasing their capability, and the lack thereof of the company that was attacked.” As a result, IT security and network teams must be vigilant and always be on high alert. The Hybrid Solution  Some CISOs are moving to a “hybrid” approach to combating a DDoS attack of the of the Open System Interconnection (OSI) Model Application Layer 7 variety. The approach uses an on-ground client security product that links with a cloud-based mitigation tool. One argument for this approach is that attack victims can react more quickly to a specific attack on a business area, such as engineering or customer support, if they have the benefit of cloud-based updates rather than waiting for a network-based device to be updated. “Based on the customers I talk to, hybrid approaches are becoming mainstream,” says Tonnesen. Client and cloud security products work together with one or the other configured as a rules-based defense working on certain types of data attacks that affect key assets and applications.  Typically, underlying attacks involve a DNA-like sequence that lives in a lower level of an organization’s technology stack, such as malware sitting on a server some place, and begin to take over key assets. “That’s where a DDoS mitigation service can really help a weakness or attack sector,” Tonnesen says. “One approach really isn’t good enough anymore.” Mike Weber, vice president of labs of Coalfire, a cyber risk management and compliance company based in Louisville, Colo., says that “being able to diagnose a denial of service attack does take some time. Generally understanding if it’s a problem internally, such as an application malfunction, system problem or faulty hardware, those kinds of diagnostics take a while.” When Weber was fending off DDoS attacks at a former employer, a web hosting company, he received an insider’s view of old-fashioned corporate espionage. The client hosting company had known adversaries but could never pin the frequent attacks on a single entity. “They had a good idea who was behind the attacks,” he remembers. “A lot of times, it was their competition. It was used as a revenge tactic – sometimes it was intended to impact that company from a business perspective for whatever reason. Maybe it’s a page rank or advertising issue.” Attackers leverage those kinds of attacks to consume personnel/intellectual capital being used for diagnosis. While the victim attempts to identify the strategy attempting to thwart it typically sends companies under attack into a state of chaos. An attack against a website can be set to look like a denial of service interspersed with an attack that achieved the end goal of flooding log servers. Typically the obvious attack needs to be stopped before one can diagnose the other less obvious attack. “Think of that as DNS (Domain Name System) amplification – a DDoS attack where the attacker basically exploits vulnerabilities in the DNS servers to be able to turn small inquiries into large payloads, which are directed back to the victim’s server,” Weber says. “Those are a different protocol than those other attacks that are attacking different parts of the infrastructure whether they’re operating systems or applications. So typically they would be targeted towards two different parts of the client environment.” Malicious Traffic A typical approach to prevent DDoS from inflicting damage is to re-route non-malicious traffic to a cloud-based or third-party provider whose sole purpose is to mitigate denial of service-type attacks at what’s known as a “scrubbing” center. “Only clean traffic gets through,” says J.J. Cummings, managing principal of Cisco’s security incident response team. DDoS traffic then purposely gets diverted to the external provider, which takes the “brunt” of the attack and “roots out all that’s evil and bad.” Denial of service attacks are extremely challenging and can be expensive from a mitigation perspective, in terms of pipe size and technology, he admits. “At the end of the day it comes down to how critical these business applications are,” Cummings says. “How much do you want to spend to withstand an attack and an attack of what size?” The first questions that need to be addressed before, during or following a DDoS, says Cummings, “are how big is your Internet pipe and how much bandwidth has been thrown at you historically?” The answers determine a network’s required level of operational capability as well as what the needs at a bare minimum to resume the business. Security products are available from multiple vendors to help harden a company’s public-facing systems so they’re less susceptible to targeted types of attacks. “Those technologies presume you have enough of an Internet pipe to withstand that amount of bandwidth,” says Cummings. Otherwise, it’s a moot point. Detection analytics is another important tool to put DDoS mitigation measures in place. “You don’t all the sudden get a terabyte of traffic hitting. It kind of spools up, as that botnet starts to distribute the attack commands,” he adds. ISPs can know in advance to block certain IP addresses or certain traffic streams upstream. More sophisticated attacks often are focused on a profit motive and target companies with a lot of money or a gambling site that is taking bets on a major sporting event. In online video gaming or gambling, some players go to the extremes of disrupting the network where the opposition is hosted by firing off a DDoS attack. Retribution is another scenario with DDoS attacks. A former employee or student gets mad and rents a botnet to conduct the attack. A significant consequence to a denial of service attack is damage to the victim organization’s reputation, in addition to a potential dollar loss for every minute that the network is offline. Nearly two-thirds (64 percent) of respondents in the Ponemon Institute’s denial of service study say reputation damage is the main consequence of a DoS attack, with 35 percent for diminished IT staff productivity and 33 percent for revenue losses. “We try to come up with metrics on how to measure reputation loss, which is pretty significant,” says Larry Ponemon, chairman of the Ponemon Institute, the cybersecurity think tank based in Traverse City, Mich. “When people hear the bad news, what do they do? The churn can be significant from a revenue point of view. People leave, they find alternatives.” Citing research from the institute’s recent Cost of Data Breach study, Ponemon says the most expensive attack type on a unit cost per attack is DDoS, when compared to other security incidents such as phishing, because it takes a lot of effort to stop it. Meanwhile, he adds, “there’s an extraction of data while people are worrying about the website being down.” Source: http://www.scmagazine.com/waiting-for-ddos/article/523247/

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