Tag Archives: network

Chinese Gambling Company Was Target of a Nine-Vector 470 Gbps DDoS Attack

The attack also reached 110 million packets per second On June 14, a Chinese gambling company was unlucky enough to be at the end of a complex multi-vector DDoS attack that blasted over 470 gigabits per second (Gbps) and over 110 million packets per second (Mpps) at its servers. The attack came after the company had already faced multiple 250+ Gbps attacks in the previous days. The good news is that this 470 Gbps attack only lasted four hours and was deflected by the company’s DDoS mitigation service. Nine-vector DDoS attacks are rare Even if short, the attack itself was extremely complex, with the crooks utilizing nine different attack vectors. Compared to data from the first quarter of 2016, nine-vector DDoS attacks are extremely rare and happen once every 500 attacks (0.2% of all attacks). This particular attack started with a basic network-level assault that wanted to suffocate the network with large amounts of data. It first blasted SYN payloads, then generic TCP and UDP data packets. From the get-go, the attack was different from all the previous attacks, throwing over 300 Gbps at its target from its initial seconds, before growing bigger to reach its peak value. Attack evolved from network to application level Midway through the attack, the crooks completely changed tactics. They stopped the network-level attack and shifted to an application layer DDoS, during which attackers send packets of a smaller size, but in larger numbers to occupy the memory of the receiving servers. Incapsula, the company that was providing DDoS mitigation, said that in Q1 2016, it regularly mitigated application layer 50+ Mpps DDoS attacks every four days, and 80+ Mpps attacks every eight days. Even if this attack exceeded 110 Mpps, the company was able to mitigate the threat. The combination of all these vectors makes this one of the most complex attacks the company saw. In fact, Incapsula said this was the biggest DDoS attack it mitigated in terms of sheer size (470 Gbps) in its entire history. “On a technical level we want to make clear that there isn’t much difference in mitigating 300, 400, or 500 Gbps network layer attacks,” Incapsula’s Igal Zeifman and Ofer Gayer explain. “They’re similar threats, each dealt with in a similar manner. Large attack waves aren’t more dangerous than smaller ones. All you need is a bigger boat.” Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/chinese-gambling-company-was-target-of-a-nine-vector-470-gbps-ddos-attack-505850.shtml#ixzz4D57R4eWd

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Chinese Gambling Company Was Target of a Nine-Vector 470 Gbps DDoS Attack

Overwatch Servers Went Down After Alleged DDoS Attack

Infamous hacker group Lizard Squad is thought to be at it again, this time taking down Overwatch servers and leaving players unable to join and remain in a session. Over the past week, Blizzard has been experiencing some problems with Battle.net that have made it difficult for players to use the service as intended with games like Overwatch . Now, there’s word that these issues might have been caused by a DDoS attack launched by members of hacker group Lizard Squad. Some users are reporting that they are unable to log in to Battle.net. Others are able to enter, but find themselves kicked out of multiplayer matches in Overwatch for seemingly no reason. Ordinarily, issues like these would be brushed off as being part and parcel of the modern online experience. However, a suspicious tweet from a known Lizard Squad member has led to the group being implicated, according to a report from VG247. The above tweet is being taken as proof that Lizard Squad member AppleJ4ck was involved with the attack. Some Overwatch players responded to his post to vent their annoyance about the situation — to which AppleJ4ck responded, “in a way, I’m doing y’all a favor.” This is not the first time that Lizard Squad has targeted organizations within the video game industry. The group rose to prominence back in 2014, when a coordinated attack brought down the PlayStation Network and Xbox Live over Christmas, causing massive headaches for the companies involved. Of course, the attack was not an unmitigated success for the group, as the high-profile hack made Lizard Squad an immediate target for authorities. Just days later, a 22-year-old alleged to be a part of the organization was the subject of a raid by police in the United Kingdom. However, the strength of a group like Lizard Squad is the fact that they are spread all over the world. Individual members can be found and brought to justice, but it’s difficult to make a concerted attempt to stamp out its activity outright. If the situation is hard on the authorities, then it’s even more challenging for a company like Blizzard. The overwhelming popularity of Overwatch means its hard enough for the company to keep Battle.net afloat at the best of team, never mind when there are hackers on the prowl. Unfortunately, criminal elements like Lizard Squad are part and parcel of the modern online experience. Companies like Blizzard have to take these groups into consideration when operating a service like Battle.net — hackers have the power to ruin the experience for the rest of us, and the only defence is a robust level of security. Source: http://gamerant.com/overwatch-servers-down-ddos-attack-846/

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Overwatch Servers Went Down After Alleged DDoS Attack

DDoS defenses have been backsliding but starting a turnaround

Distributed denial-of-service attacks have been getting bigger and lasting longer, and for the past few years defenses haven’t kept pace, but that seems to be changing, Gartner analysts explained at the firm’s Security and Risk Management Summit. Gartner tracks the progress of new technologies as they pass through five stages from the trigger that gets them started to the final stage where they mature and are productive. The continuum is known as the Hype Cycle. DDoS defense had reached the so-called Plateau of Productivity – the final stage – in 2012, but then has moved backwards in the Hype Cycle in the past few years into the previous stage – the Slope of Enlightenment – says Gartner analyst Lawrence Orans. That fall, DDoS attacks were 10 times as large as any then seen hit Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, U.S. Bank and PNC Bank using botnets of compromised servers to generate high volumes of traffic against not only HTTP and HTTPS but DNS as well. They also went after protocols including TCP, UDP, and ICMP. That was followed up in 2013 by the use of NTP amplification attacks that used Network Time Protocol servers to swamp networks with responses to requests made from spoofed IP addresses in the target network. “That set DDoS back on its heels,” Orans says. But security vendors and service providers that offer DDoS protection have caught up, and Gartner’s Hype Cycle rating for DDoS defenses will shift again back toward the maturity end of the scale, he says. That’s encouraging because the number of DDoS attacks from the first quarter of 2015 to the first quarter of 2016 more than doubled, according to Akamai’s latest State of the Internet Security report, and mega attacks hit hundreds of gigabits per second. Attacks of 300Gbps and above can be handled by leading DDoS vendors, Orans says, and given the ready availability of DDoS attack kits, it’s important for corporations to pay for this type of protection. Competition among DDoS mitigation providers is increasing, so prices have dropped, he says. Flat fees per month were the norm for DDoS protection services, but now there are more flexible plans. Protection can come in three models. Providers sell access to scrubbing centers, where traffic during a DDoS attack is redirected to a provider’s network where the attack traffic is dropped and only good traffic returned to the customer network. This can cost $5,000 per month and up. Some providers he mentioned: Akamai, Arbor, F5, Neustar, Nexusguard, Radware and Verisign. Some ISPs offer this type of service at a 15% to 20% premium over bandwidth costs, he says. Some ISPs are better at it than others, so customers should check them carefully, particularly newer and regional ones. Many businesses have multiple ISPs, so they should do the math to see if it makes sense to use this option, he says. Some ISPs he mentions: AT&T, CenturyLink, Level 3 and Verizon. Content-delivery networks can also help mitigate DDoS attacks, he says, by virtue of their architecture. CDNs distribute customer Web content around the world so it’s as close as possible to end users. That distribution makes it harder for attackers to find the right servers to hit and diffuses their capabilities. This option isn’t for everyone, he says. It’s not as effective as the others and it doesn’t make sense unless a business needs a CDN anyway to boost its response time. Web application firewalls can help mitigate those DDoS attacks that seek to disrupt use of Web applications. They can be deployed on premises with gear owned by the customer, but internet-hosted and cloud-based WAF services are emerging, Orans says. Cloud-based WAF is fastest growing for mobile devices that must be deployed quickly, he says. Source: http://www.networkworld.com/article/3083797/security/gartner-ddos-defenses-have-been-backsliding-but-starting-a-turnaround.html

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DDoS defenses have been backsliding but starting a turnaround

UK, US law enforcement agencies disrupt Dridex botnet

The UK's National Crime Agency is spearheading an onslaught against the Dridex (aka Bugat, aka Cridex) banking malware and the criminals that wield it. “Dridex malware, also known as Bugat and Crid…

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UK, US law enforcement agencies disrupt Dridex botnet

Remote code exec hijack hole found in Huawei 4G USB modems

Ruskies sling malicious packet to trigger denial of service. Positive Technologies researchers Timur Yunusov and Kirill Nesterov have found since-patched remote execution and denial of service vulnerabilities in a popular Huawei 4G USB modem that can allow attackers to hijack connected computers.…

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Remote code exec hijack hole found in Huawei 4G USB modems

Hand-cranked ‘DDoS’ floors Thai government website amid protests

Great Firewall of Thailand? ?????????????????, say locals Thai government websites dropped offline this week in what was either a politically motivated distributed denial-of-service attack or a case of badly designed websites falling over in response to an unusual increase in visitor numbers.…

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Hand-cranked ‘DDoS’ floors Thai government website amid protests

Vigilante VXer FIXES SOHOpeless routers

Stallman sycophant offers password reminders and handy debug tips. Threat boffin Mario Ballano says VXers have broken into a host of routers creating a botnet dedicated solely to securing and hardening the devices.…

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Vigilante VXer FIXES SOHOpeless routers

Patch NOW: VMware vCenter, ESXi can be pwned via your network

Remote-code execution danger on VM hosts VMware is urging users of its vCenter Server and ESXi software to install its latest patches to plug vulnerabilities that can allow remote-code execution and denial of service.…

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Patch NOW: VMware vCenter, ESXi can be pwned via your network

7 key global DDoS trends revealed

Neustar released the findings of its latest DDoS report, including key trends. The global research reveals more activity around targeted, smaller assaults aimed at distracting firms’ IT departments wh…

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7 key global DDoS trends revealed