Reddit, Github, Airbnb and pals affected A denial of service attack against managed DNS provider Dyn restricted access to many US-based websites on Friday.…
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Dyn dinged by DDoS: US DNS firm gives web a bad hair day
Reddit, Github, Airbnb and pals affected A denial of service attack against managed DNS provider Dyn restricted access to many US-based websites on Friday.…
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Dyn dinged by DDoS: US DNS firm gives web a bad hair day
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
‘Tiny fraction of the overall count’ however A petition for a second EU referendum in the UK has been hit by suspicions of computer automated ballot stuffing, possibly by politically motivated hackers.…
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Botnet-powered ballot stuffing suspected in 2nd referendum petition
Empty threats from faux hackers doing the rounds again What kind of a grifter pretends he’s going to DDoS you? The kind that easily makes off with a lot of cash, it seems. “Hackers” who have been making empty DDoS threats while posing as the Armada Collective appear to have have moved on.…
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Did your UK biz just pay £1,500 to stop a DDoS? You’ve been had
Single point of failure key in takedown Security researchers have teamed up with authorities in Ukraine to take down a spam-spewing Linux-infesting botnet.…
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Mumblehard spam-spewing botnet floored
Alleged cyber-crims unleashed 140Gbps of duff packets at networks The US Department of Justice (DoJ) has charged seven Iranian hackers over a string of high-profile distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks against banks.…
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US charges Iranians with hacking into an NY dam, blasting banks offline
An unwelcome PITSTOP Glitches at distributed denial-of-service mitigation biz Incapsula left the websites it defends offline twice on Thursday.…
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DDoS protection biz Incapsula knackers its customers’ websites
CryptoWall most prevalent nasty – survey File-encrypting ransomware has eclipsed botnets to become the main threat to enterprises, according to Trend Micro.…
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Cyber-crooks now prefer ransomware to botnets. Yep, firms are paying up
600,000 servers are vulnerable to this little-known protocol Security researchers have discovered a new vector for DDoS amplification attacks – and it’s quite literally trivial.…
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Trivial path for DDoS amplification attacks found by infosec bods
$66 a pop, if you’re the sort who pays for these things OPSEC mistakes by a cybercrook have allowed security researchers to estimate the revenue of a Russian DDoS booter merchant.…
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OPSEC mistakes spill Russian DDoS scum’s payment secrets