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Telephonic DoS tied to Ukraine power grid takedown

More information is being revealed regarding the late December attack on the Ukrainian power grid with reports indicating the attack on the utility was supported by a simultaneous telephonic denial of service (DoS)incident. The Ukrainian DoS attack took out the company’s call center so its customers could not call and let workers know that service was being disrupted, according to a published report. A telephonic DoS attack works in the same manner as one hitting a computer system, but in this case a call center is overwhelmed with calls to shut it down. In addition, with the telephone system down the utility company staffers could not communicate effectively to fix the problem. Telephonic DoS attacks can be used to obfuscate any type of attack to attract an IT department’s attention while the real assault takes place against another segment of the network. Source: http://www.scmagazine.com/telephonic-dos-tied-to-ukraine-power-grid-takedown/article/467076/

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Telephonic DoS tied to Ukraine power grid takedown

Irish lottery site and ticket machines hit by DDoS attack

Ireland’s National Lottery website and ticket machines were knocked offline after a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack on Wednesday. Customers trying to buy tickets for the €12m (£9m) draw found themselves unable to do so for nearly two hours. The jackpot was the largest in 18 months. Premier Lotteries Ireland (PLI), the operator, has said the incident is under investigation. During a DDoS attack, a website or online service’s capacity to handle internet traffic is overloaded – usually by automated programs set to flood the site with requests. The attack began at 11:21 GMT on Wednesday and lasted for about two hours. Retail systems were brought back online by 12:45 GMT and the website by 13:25 GMT. “They said you couldn’t buy tickets from the ticket machines, which is really interesting, it’s not just the website – it would be quite interesting to understand why that happened,” said John Graham-Cumming at DDoS-protection company Cloudflare. ‘Under investigation’ “This incident is still under investigation,” a spokeswoman said. “However, we can confirm that at no point was the National Lottery gaming system or player data affected.” Given the large jackpot involved, the lottery was experiencing high demand for tickets on Wednesday lunchtime. The impact of the attack may well have been heightened by this, according to Igal Zeifman, senior digital strategist at cybersecurity company Imperva. “As a rule, record-setting prizes and jackpots result in traffic spikes on lottery sites, and it is very common for DDoS attackers to strike during such predictable peak traffic times, especially when going after big targets,” he said. Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-35373890

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Irish lottery site and ticket machines hit by DDoS attack

Data center outages increasingly caused by DDoS

While overall unplanned data center outages have decreased, those that were the result of targeted DDoS attacks have skyrocketed. Think housing your servers in a data center rather than squeezing them under your desk is a bulletproof solution? Well, they might be safer in a data center, but believe it or not, some of the same pitfalls that can create trouble in the office can affect those secure data centers too. Namely UPS failure, human error, and cybercrime. ‘Unplanned’ UPS system failure is still the principal cause of “unplanned data center outages,” according to a new report. A quarter of all such events were related to UPS systems and batteries, according to Emerson Network Power in association with Ponemon Institute. The two organizations have been studying the cost of unplanned data center outages. Cybercrime But cybercrime-caused outages, specifically Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks, constituted a whopping 22% of the unplanned disruptions last year. That’s up from just 2% in 2010 and 18% in 2013, the last times the two organizations performed the survey. The survey collected responses from 63 data center operations who had observed an outage in the prior about year about what exactly happened. The report was published this month. Root causes Accidental causes or human error were the third biggest cause of unplanned outages, according to the report. Those mishaps caused 22% of the failures. That’s the same percentage as in 2013, but lower than in 2010, when 24% of outages were accidental or human-caused. Interestingly, many other causes of outages are lower now than they were in 2010 and 2013. They’ve been usurped by cybercrime’s huge gain. UPS failure is down slightly on 2010, when it accounted for 29% of the outages. And the aforementioned human error is down a bit. And utility failure, such as water, heat, and Computer Room Air Conditioning, which today makes up just 11% of the outages, was at 15% in 2010. Generators Likewise, generators appear to have become more reliable. Those systems contributed to 10% of the failures in 2010, whereas today they only make up 6%. The researchers don’t provide numbers relating to changing data center design over the period. Fewer generators in use—replaced by solar and alternative energy—could conceivably have caused that statistical decline. The report doesn’t specify. Weather Overall, most unplanned outage causes—including those caused by weather, which accounted for 10% of outages this year, compared to 12% in 2010 and 2013—have declined in favor of cybercrime. Even IT failure, a measly 4% of failures today, dropped from 5% in 2010. About $9K per minute And the cost? The report was released to expound on the cost of the outages, rather than to apportion blame. Well, the “average total cost per minute of an unplanned outage increased from $5,617 in 2010 to $7,908 in 2013 to $8,851 now,” according to the report. Downtime at data centers now costs an average of $740,357. That’s a 38% increase on 2010, the study calculates. And maximum costs are even higher. “Maximum downtime costs are rising faster than average, increasing 81% since 2010 to a current high of $2,409,991,” the report says. Source: http://www.networkworld.com/article/3024773/data-center/data-center-outages-increasingly-caused-by-ddos.html

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Data center outages increasingly caused by DDoS

Lotto ticket machines, website working after DDoS attack

The National Lottery website and ticket machines were targeted by a cyber-attack to disrupt its operations. A  DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attack floods the communications system with traffic affecting all communications connectivity. “Indications are that this morning’s technical issues were as a result of a DDoS attack affecting our communications networks,” a statement from the Lottery said. “The issues were resolved by the National Lottery’s DDoS protection systems, limiting disruption and restoring all operations within two hours. “This incident is still under investigation. However, we can confirm that at no point was the National Lottery gaming system or player data affected,” the statement added. Tonight’s jackpot is heading for €12 million. RGDATA, the representative association for the independent retail grocery sector, said the National Lottery made it aware of the problem this morning. Last February, the National Lottery was forced to postpone its draw for 24 hours after a technical problem stopped ticket machines working. Source: http://www.rte.ie/news/2016/0120/761563-national-lottery/

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Lotto ticket machines, website working after DDoS attack

DDoS Attack Hits Kickass Torrents, DNS Servers Crippled

Site goes down for most of the day on January 16 Kickass Torrents, the Internet’s biggest torrent portal has suffered downtime yesterday after an unknown attacker has pummeled the site with a DDoS attack. According to a statement given by the site’s administrators to TorrentFreak, a blog dedicated to piracy news, the attack was aimed at the website’s DNS servers. Because of this, both the main domain and the plethora of official site proxies were down as well. The brunt of the attack was registered yesterday, January 16, and had the site taken offline for almost all day. Previously, during the week, the site was also hit by smaller DDoS attacks. Everything seems to be up and running now, but expect future attacks as well. The attack fits the pattern of a DDoS extortion campaign, when small attacks are launched at first, and then a bigger one to force victims into paying the DDoS ransom. Earlier this week, Europol announced the capture of the famed DD4BC DDoS extortion group in Bosnia and Herzegovina. DD4BC is the first group known to launch DDoS attacks and then ask for payments in Bitcoin. The group’s actions have been copied by many other DDoSing outfits, and most DDoS attacks nowadays are launched for this reason. Kickass Torrents is one of Alexa’s top 100 sites on the Internet, meaning it’s an attractive target for DDoSing groups, thanks to its huge advertising revenue. Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/ddos-attack-hits-kickass-torrents-dns-servers-crippled-499019.shtml

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DDoS Attack Hits Kickass Torrents, DNS Servers Crippled

DDoS Defense: Better Traction in Tandem?

DDoS attacks are nothing new, but they remain the nemesis of many IT departments in organizations big and small. Why? Because attacks can come from any source, use multiple protocols, leverage massive botnets and often aren’t detected until it’s too late. According to SecurityWeek, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is now developing a new kind of DDoS defense, one based on collaboration rather than isolation. But can companies really get better security traction in tandem rather than acting alone? Big Numbers, Big Problems As noted by Dark Reading, DDoS attacks “are growing in frequency, size, severity, sophistication and even persistence each year.” Since there’s no single vector for these attacks — coupled with the fact that many look like server or network failures at first glance — it’s no wonder both small companies and large enterprises are getting hit, and hit often. Consider Rutgers University: In 2015, the institution faced six separate DDoS events. Financial institutions and government organizations faced many more, both attempted and successful, because the mechanism for attacks remains simple: Malicious actors need only reliable botnets and solid connections to launch a full-scale effort. The speed and simplicity of DDoS attacks is also encouraging malicious actors to ramp up their efforts. According to BetaNews, for example, the BBC was hit with a massive attack on New Year’s Eve that — if the attackers themselves are telling the truth — reached a maximum of 602 Gbps. That’s almost double the size of the current DDoS record holder at 334 Gbps. The group responsible, called New World Hacking, also targeted Donald Trump’s website and said it had plans to go after ISIS-related sites, although it claimed the BBC attack was merely a test and not intended to bring the site down for hours. Some security pros said the group may be targeting high-profile sites in an effort to promote its in-house DDoS tool, BangStresser. Stopping Traffic With DDoS Defense With DDoS tools and hacking-as-a-service now available for purchase at virtually any Dark Web marketplace and effectively being advertised through public attacks, companies are understandably concerned. Even when caught midstream, it’s difficult to respond before servers start failing and other, more sophisticated attacks take aim at critical corporate data. As a result, dealing with DDoS has become a top priority for organizations like the DHS, which just awarded a $1.7 million contract to tech company Galois in hopes of strengthening DDoS defense. The biggest news from the announcement is the development of a new project called DDoS Defense for a Community of Peers (3DCoP), which uses a peer-to-peer mechanism that allows organizations to work together and collectively defeat DDoS attacks. The thinking here is that since many companies and institutions are often targeted by similar attacks, a coordinated response increases the chance of early detection and swift response, in turn lowering overall damage. Historically, businesses have been reluctant to share attack data or collaborate on defense for fear of giving away trade security secrets or seeming weak in comparison to other companies. The high-volume, high-impact nature of DDoS attacks, however, make this an untenable position; users don’t care about protecting company pride if the result is reduced compute performance or total server failure. If the DHS effort works as intended, however, organizations should be able to collectively tap the power of the combined whole and get better traction on DDoS defense. In other words, a steady security climb instead of spinning wheels. Source: https://securityintelligence.com/news/ddos-defense-better-traction-in-tandem/

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DDoS Defense: Better Traction in Tandem?

Nissan Takes Down Website on Its Own After Anonymous DDoS Attacks

Nissan has taken down two of its websites after members of the Anonymous hacker collective launched DDoS attacks against the company to protest against Japan’s whale-hunting operations. Anonymous had previously hacked many targets as part of its #OpWhales and #OpKillingBay campaigns, including the government websites in Japan and Iceland, the personal website of Japan’s PM Shinzo Abe, and many other more . While most of the times the group pointed its DDoS cannons towards Japanese officials that had direct involvement in whale and dolphin killing operations, the attack on the Nissan website is a change from the group’s modus operandi. Anonymous takes new approach in #OpWhales Recently, Anonymous hackers started targeting Japanese businesses in order to have them lobby and put pressure on Japanese officials to stop whale hunting. Until now, these have been only smaller companies. Japanese television station NHK said that, during the last few months of 2015, over 100 Japanese firms were hit by DDoS attacks. All changed yesterday, when Anonymous decided to go after Japan’s second largest car manufacturer. The attacks were brutal and scared Nissan’s security staff enough to shut down the nissan.co.jp and nissan-global.com domains to prevent more dangerous intrusions. Nissan admins took down the websites after the DDoS attacks started to amp up “Because of a potential distributed denial of service attack, we are temporarily suspending service on our websites to prevent further risks,” said Nissan representatives in a statement for Agence France-Presse. The hacker that carried out the attack later commented that he didn’t breach the company’s databases and was only interested in sending a message. This message is that, despite signing international conventions to stop whale hunting, Japan is using loopholes to justify its actions as “scientific research.” At the moment of writing this article, both of Nissan’s targeted websites are still offline. Source: http://news.softpedia.com/news/nissan-takes-down-website-on-its-own-after-anonymous-ddos-attack-498862.shtml

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Nissan Takes Down Website on Its Own After Anonymous DDoS Attacks

A DDoS Learning Curve for Universities, Government & Enterprises

Distributed Denial of Service attacks are easy, cheap and too often, effective. But they’re not unstoppable. There’s no getting around it — DDoS attacks are growing in frequency, size, severity, sophistication, and even persistence each year. These tenacious, effective attacks can last anywhere from hours to months. They can be launched from botnets, use multiple protocols, and even disguise themselves with SSL encryption. Protecting yourself against DDoS isn’t a matter of stopping one attack but a multitude, sometimes all at once. Even worse, IT departments may not realize an attack is underway, thinking a failing server or application is responsible. Rutgers University, for example, recently fell prey to its sixth known DDoS attack in a single year — and Rutgers is not an outlier. Thousands of DDoS attacks hit universities, enterprises, government organizations, and banks every day—some successful, some not. One thing is for sure: no one is safe, and attacks will continue because DDoS attacks are easy, cheap and, too often, effective. But they’re not unstoppable. Universities and other organizations can take steps to prepare for and minimize the effect of even the most sophisticated assaults: Step 1. Have a good monitoring system in place Security teams have many ways to get insight into their network, including flow sampling, in-path detection and mirrored data packets. Here’s a brief breakdown of the pluses and minuses: Flow sampling: The router samples packets and exports datagrams on them. While scalable, this method leaves out large quantities of information because it only samples one packet out of thousands. This allows some “slow and low” attacks to fly under the detection radar, or take a long time to trigger an alert. In-path detection:  A high-performance DDoS mitigation device continuously processes all incoming traffic and possibly outgoing traffic. The device can take immediate action with sub-second mitigation times. One concern is ensuring the mitigation solution can scale with the uplink capacity during multi-vector attacks. Mirrored data packets: Full detail for analysis is provided, while not necessarily in the path of traffic. This method can be a challenge to set up, but allows for fast detection of anomalies in traffic and is a centralized place for analysis and mitigation. Step 2. Keep an eye on performance metrics and scalability When it comes to DDoS, everything happens on a large scale: the number of attacking computers, the bandwidth they consume and the connections they generate. To fight back, organizations need a combination of high-performance, purpose-built hardware that can mitigate common, yet large-scale attacks effectively, and intelligent software that can inspect traffic at the highest packet rates. For instance, an effective combination might include leveraging dedicated network traffic processors (e.g. FPGAs) to handle the common network-layer attack in combination with powerful, multi-core CPUs to mitigate more complex application-layer attacks. What’s key here is to ensure there is enough processing headroom to prepare networks for future generations of DDoS attacks. Step 3. Invest in a security awareness program Mitigation of next-generation DDoS attacks starts with training — especially to recognize normal network behavior and spot anomalies. For instance, companies that have started their migration to IPv6 must have security specialists in place that know IPv6 well enough to recognize attacks when they happen, and then to know how to use available tools to properly fight them off. Proper training allows organizations to be proactive versus reactive. Security policies take time to devise, so universities and other organizations shouldn’t wait for the IT support staff to raise a red flag before they decide to take action. Source: http://www.darkreading.com/attacks-breaches/a-ddos-learning-curve-for-universities-government-and-enterprises-/a/d-id/1323879

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A DDoS Learning Curve for Universities, Government & Enterprises

DDoS attack on Pakistan Government Websites on Live Radio

Dozens of government websites in Pakistan have been targeted by hackers, including one military site that was taken down during a live radio interview with one of the group’s members. The organization responsible, known as New World Hackers, performed a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack on Pakistan’s Frontier Constabulary website during an appearance on the AnonUK Radio Show on Sunday, following a weekend of sustained attacks on government sites. Dozens of government websites in Pakistan have been targeted by hackers, including one military site that was taken down during a live radio interview with one of the group’s members. The organization responsible, known as New World Hackers, performed a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack on Pakistan’s Frontier Constabulary website during an appearance on the AnonUK Radio Show on Sunday, following a weekend of sustained attacks on government sites. “It’s not that the Indian hackers want to attack Pakistani sites, there is a war between them and the Pakistani hackers,” the New World Hackers member says. “We upgraded the capabilities of the Indian hackers. “The Pakistani hackers always wish to fuck with India. The Indian hackers are actually the good guys.” Pakistan’s Frontier Constabulary did not respond to a request for comment. Source: http://www.newsweek.com/hackers-take-down-pakistan-government-websites-live-radio-413888

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DDoS attack on Pakistan Government Websites on Live Radio

Minnesota Courts Website Target Of DDoS Attacks

A week after the Minnesota courts website was completely shut down for 10 days in December, we’re finally finding out why. The Minnesota Judicial Branch says its website was the target of two distributed-denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks. In a DDoS attack, a website or server is overwhelmed with network traffic until it can no longer function for legitimate users. The MJB says the attacks in December left their site unusable to members of the public for several hours, and was eventually completely shut down from Dec. 21 to 31 in order to install additional safeguards. Officials say no personal data was breached as a result of the attack — DDoS attacks are typically used to sabotage a website or server , rather than steal information. Authorities say initial forensics show the attacks were primarily launched from servers in Asia and Canada, and international authorities are investigating. Source: http://minnesota.cbslocal.com/2016/01/08/minnesota-courts-website-target-of-ddos-attacks/

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Minnesota Courts Website Target Of DDoS Attacks