Tag Archives: games

Gee, tanks: Russian hackers DDoS Germany for aiding Ukraine

Also: a week of leaks; Riot Games says ‘LoL’ to source code ransom demands; and Yandex source also appears online in brief   Russian hackers have proved yet again how quickly cyber attacks can be used to respond to global events with a series of DDoS attacks on German infrastructure and government websites in response to the country’s plan to send tanks to Ukraine.…

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Gee, tanks: Russian hackers DDoS Germany for aiding Ukraine

DraftKings rides to court, asks to unmask 10 DDoS suspects

Fantasy sports outfit looks to hunt down group that bombarded its site A US sports gaming company is asking permission to unmask 10 people it believes were behind a massive DDoS attack on its website earlier this month.…

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DraftKings rides to court, asks to unmask 10 DDoS suspects

Hungarian bug-hunters spot 130,000 vulnerable Avtech vid systems on Shodan

SOHOpeless CCTVs and video recorders It shouldn’t surprise anyone that closed circuit television (CCTV) rigs are becoming the world’s favourite botnet hosts: pretty much any time a security researcher looks at a camera, it turns out to be a buggy mess.…

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Hungarian bug-hunters spot 130,000 vulnerable Avtech vid systems on Shodan

Source code unleashed for junk-blasting Internet of Things botnet

Hackforums leak Malicious code used to press-gang IoT connected devices into a botnet was leaked online over the weekend.…

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Source code unleashed for junk-blasting Internet of Things botnet

No wonder we’re being hit by Internet of Things botnets. Ever tried patching a Thing?

Akamai CSO laments pisspoor security design practices Internet of Things devices are starting to pose a real threat to security for the sensible part of the web, Akamai’s chief security officer Andy Ellis has told The Register .…

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No wonder we’re being hit by Internet of Things botnets. Ever tried patching a Thing?

152k cameras in 990Gbps record-breaking dual DDoS

Hacked low-powered cameras and internet-of-things things The world’s largest distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack has been clocked from the same network of 152,463 compromised low-powered cameras and internet-of-things devices which punted a media outlet off the internet.…

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152k cameras in 990Gbps record-breaking dual DDoS

Security man Krebs’ website DDoS was powered by hacked Internet of Things botnet

Internet of Amazingly Insecure Tat? That’s the one The huge distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack which wiped security journalist Brian Krebs’ website from the internet came from a million-device-strong Internet of Things botnet.…

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Security man Krebs’ website DDoS was powered by hacked Internet of Things botnet

Google rushes in where Akamai fears to tread, shields Krebs after world’s-worst DDoS

600 Gbps traffic flood overwhelmed CDN Google has provided free distributed denial of service attack (DDoS) mitigation services to security publication Krebs on Security , stepping in after Akamai withdrew support.…

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Google rushes in where Akamai fears to tread, shields Krebs after world’s-worst DDoS

Blizzard’s Battle.net Servers Knocked Offline By Another DDoS Attack

Blizzard Entertainment became a victim of yet another distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack as its Battle.net servers were knocked down on Sunday, Sept. 18. The DDoS attack that rendered Battle.net’s servers offline was waged by hacking group PoodleCorp. Owing to the attack, Battle.net, which runs several popular games such as  World of Warcraft ,  Hearthstone: Heroes of Warcraft  and  Overwatch  to name a few, was left handicapped even as angry users took to social media to vent their ire. Gamers on PC, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One were all affected by the outage. Blizzard Entertainment acknowledged the situation on its official Twitter account. “We are currently monitoring a DDOS attack against network providers which is affecting latency/connections to our games,” wrote Blizzard in a tweet. The DDoS attack on Battle.net lasted for half an hour after PoodleCorp took to Twitter to state that it would halt the attack and restore the servers if the tweet below was retweeted 2,000 times. The blackmail (ransom note?) found favor with a majority of gamers as they were only too willing to retweet to have access again to the games they were playing. As promised, PoodleCorp stopped the attack once the 2,000 retweet milestone was reached. This is not the first time Blizzard Entertainment has come under the mercy of PoodleCorp. Earlier in August, we reported that it was hit with a PoodleCorp DDoS attack, which disrupted gameplay for users of Battle.net until network engineers addressed the issue. Back then however, the hacking group did not ask for retweets. Blizzard Entertainment has been the victim of a spate of DDoS attacks in the past few months. In June, an attack took down its servers as well. The outage was attributed to Lizard Squad member AppleJ4ck, who claimed responsibility and cautioned that the hack was a small part of some “preparations.” Aside from the DDoS attack, Blizzard has been having a terrible week anyway. On Sept. 14, 16 and 18, the company suffered from technical issues that prevented or delayed users from logging in and joining the game servers. However, for now, Blizzard Entertainment can breathe easy as the technical problems Battle.net was encountering owing to the DDoS attack from PoodleCorp have been resolved. Source: http://www.techtimes.com/articles/178300/20160919/blizzards-battle-net-servers-knocked-offline-by-another-ddos-attack.htm  

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Blizzard’s Battle.net Servers Knocked Offline By Another DDoS Attack