Tag Archives: ddos news

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

Here’s how security cameras drove the world’s biggest DDoS attack ever

DDoS attacks are reaching monster levels that pose a massive threat The record for the biggest DDoS attack ever seen has been broken once again, with an absolute monster of distributed denial of service firepower managing to almost reach the not-so-magic 1Tbps mark. Technically this was actually two concurrent attacks, although the majority of the traffic was concentrated in one, which is the largest ever recorded single blast of DDoS. As the Register reported, Octave Klaba, the founder and CTO of OVH.com, the French hosting company which suffered the attack, said that the assault consisted of two simultaneous barrages of 799Gbps and 191Gbps, for a total of 990Gbps. The previous largest DDoS was the recent 620Gbps effort that hit ‘Krebs On Security’, the website of security researcher Brian Krebs, which was driven by the same botnet of some 150,000+ compromised Internet of Things devices, routers, DVRs and security cameras responsible for this latest volley. Krebs said he was hit in retaliation to an article posted on his blog, although it isn’t clear why OVH.com came under fire. Massive attacks As Klaba said on Twitter, though, it’s hardly uncommon for his company to experience DDoS, and a tweet outlining the attacks suffered by the organisation over a period of four days this month showed 25 separate attacks which all exceeded 100Gbps (including the two mentioned here). Several others were simultaneous (or near-simultaneous) pairs of attacks, too. He further noted that the botnet in question could potentially up its firepower by some 50% compared to the assault his  company  was hit by, tweeting: “This botnet with 145,607 cameras/dvr (1-30Mbps per IP) is able to send > 1.5Tbps DDoS.” Not only are DDoS attacks getting larger in size, but they are also becoming much more frequent according to a VeriSign report we saw back in the spring – this observed that the number of attacks had almost doubled in the final quarter of 2015, compared to the same period in the previous year. Source: http://www.techradar.com/news/internet/here-s-how-security-cameras-drove-the-world-s-biggest-ddos-attack-ever-1329480

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Here’s how security cameras drove the world’s biggest DDoS attack ever

Hackers threaten First Securities with DDoS attacks

TAIPEI, Taiwan — First Securities (?????) was blackmailed on Thursday by hackers who threatened to completely disable its trading system with DDoS (distributed denial-of-service) attacks. The hackers asked the brokerage firm to pay 50 bitcoins (approximately NT$940,000), in an email that they sent to First Securities at around 10 a.m. on Thursday. Local newspaper Apple Daily cited an unnamed source as saying that a DDoS attack came at around 11 a.m., stopping all electronic trades. First Securities President Yeh Kuang-chang (???) confirmed that they received the blackmail email but stressed that the firm’s trading system was only slowed down but not disabled by the attacks as reported. The firm has activated a reserve system and, while a small number of investors were affected by the attacks, the system was not paralyzed, Yeh said. He said he believed the situation would be resolved by Friday. Yeh said the firm had reported the incident, which he said had caused no losses to the firm, to the authorities or to the investigation bureau. Yeh also stressed that while the firm had yet to ascertain the origin of the hackers, he had preliminary ruled out the possibility that Thursday’s DDoS attacks were related to the ATM heist aimed at its sister institution — First Commercial Bank — in July. ATMs at 41 First Bank branches were hacked in the incident, with over NT$80 million believed to have been stolen. Seventeen suspects from six countries have been identified in the heist, which involved an international crime ring. The Taiwan Stock Exchange (TWSE) issued a statement at 6 p.m. saying that First Securities suffered from an unknown online attack beginning at 10:50 a.m. and was not able to immediately recover its electronic trading system. The TWSE advised investors to use other forms of trading. TWSE Vice President Chien Lih-chung (???) said the TWSE had informed other securities firms and that no other firms had reported similar blackmail or system problems. Source: http://www.chinapost.com.tw/taiwan/national/national-news/2016/09/23/479195/Hackers-threaten.htm

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Hackers threaten First Securities with DDoS attacks

Spam is once again on the rise

Spam volume is back to mid-2010 heights, and Cisco Talos researchers say that the Necurs botnet is partly to blame. “Many of the host IPs sending Necurs’ spam have been infected for more than two years. To help keep the full scope of the botnet hidden, Necurs will only send spam from a subset of its minions. An infected host might be used for two to three days, and then sometimes not again for two … More ?

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Spam is once again on the rise

DDoS always knocks twice

If you were DDoSed once, you will be DDoSed again, that is for sure. A company is rarely attacked by a DDoS (distributed denial of service) just once. If it happens once, it will probably happen again, which is why constant preventive measures are required, if a company wants to keep their online services operational. These are the results of a new report by Kaspersky Lab. Entitled Corporate IT Security Risks 2016, it says that one in six companies were victims of DDoS attacks in the past 12 months. The majority of those attacks were aimed against construction, IT and telecommunications companies. Almost four out of five (79 per cent) reported more than one attack, and almost half reported being attacked four times, or more. The length of these attacks is also an issue. Just above a third (39 per cent) are considered ‘short-lived’, while more than a fifth (21 per cent) lasted ‘several days’ or even ‘weeks’. Companies are usually the last to know they’re being attacked, too, with 27 per cent being informed by their customers, and in 46 per cent of cases by their third-party audit organisation. Kaspersky Lab says this is not unusual, as cyber-attackers usually go for customer portals (40 per cent), communication services (40 per cent) and websites (39 per cent). “It’s dangerous to view DDoS attacks as some rare occurrence that a company may encounter once, by accident, and with minimal damage. As a rule, if an attack is successful, the criminals will use this tool against a company over and over again, blocking its resources for prolonged periods of time. Unfortunately, even a single attack can inflict large financial and reputational losses and, considering the likelihood of a repeat attack is almost 80 per cent, you can multiply these losses two, three or more times. For a modern company, an anti-DDoS solution is just as necessary as the basic protection against malware and phishing,” says Alexey Kiselev, Project Manager on the Kaspersky DDoS Protection team. Source: http://www.itproportal.com/news/ddos-always-knocks-twice/

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DDoS always knocks twice

911 Is Vulnerable To DDoS Attacks

A new report has found that America’s emergency helpline number, 911, is vulnerable to Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks. Interestingly, the threat of attack has previously been issued by Department of Homeland Security as well as the FBI. Mark James, Security Specialist at ESET commented below. “These days DDoS attacks are easy to accomplish and can be relatively low cost to put in place. As technology gets cheaper, and the ability for botnets to infect more users thus making themselves stronger, seems easier and easier. The art of causing problems through brute force is now more readily available than ever before. In this modern day of internet everywhere, we take for granted the ability to access websites as and when we want them. When a website gets a DDoS attack those services become unavailable, now it’s not such a big problem when it’s a news delivery site but when it’s a service it’s a very different kettle of fish, and even more of a problem if it disrupts emergency or medical services. If you’re unable to access services in an emergency the worst case scenario could be life threatening. An effective defence to DDoS can be as easy as utilising third party services but there may be consequences for data security or disruption to the smooth user experience. Effective security is only achieved through multi-layered protection.” Source: http://www.informationsecuritybuzz.com/hacker-news/911-vulnerable-ddos-attacks/

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911 Is Vulnerable To DDoS Attacks

DDoS and web application attacks keep escalating

Akamai Technologies released its Second Quarter, 2016 State of the Internet / Security Report, which highlights the cloud security landscape, specifically trends with DDoS and web application attacks, as well as malicious traffic from bots. During May 2016, the number of attacks spiked, fueled by campaigns targeting the gaming industry “While attack sizes are decreasing, we continue to see an uptick in the number of attacks as launch tools grow increasingly pervasive and easy to … More ?

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DDoS and web application attacks keep escalating

Meet DDoSaaS: Distributed Denial of Service-as-a-Service

Cracking the grey market in rent-a-borkers Analysis   It’s not often an entirely new and thriving sector of the “digital economy” – one hitherto unmentioned by the popular press – floats to the surface of the lake in broad daylight, waving a tentacle at us.…

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Meet DDoSaaS: Distributed Denial of Service-as-a-Service

Hack reveals the inner workings of shady DDoS service vDOS

A web service that helped customers carry out distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks on unsuspecting victims has been hacked revealing data on the customers that availed of this clandestine service. According to security journalist Brian Krebs, vDos was hacked recently and he obtained a copy of the leaked data in July. Upon scrutinizing the database, he claims that vDOS is being run by two Israeli cybercriminals under the pseudonyms of P1st or P1st0 and AppleJ4ck, with associates in the United States. vDOS allegedly offered monthly subscriptions to DDoS attack services, paid in bitcoin or even through PayPal, with the prices based on how long the attack would last. These DDoS attacks would launch fake traffic at victim websites, overwhelming their servers and knocking the sites offline. A particularly strong DDoS attack could cripple a site for days. “And in just four months between April and July 2016, vDOS was responsible for launching more than 277 million seconds of attack time, or approximately 8.81 years’ worth of attack traffic,” Krebs said in his analysis. He added that he believes vDOS was handling hundreds or even thousands of concurrent attacks a day. Kreb’s analysis is based on data from April to July. Apparently all other attack data going back to the service’s founding in 2012 has been wiped away. Krebs’ source for info on the hack was allegedly able to exploit a hole in vDOS that allowed him to access its database and configuration files. It also allowed him to source the route of the service’s DDoS attacks to four servers in Bulgaria. Among the data dump were service complaint tickets where customers could file issues they had with the DDoS attacks they purchased. Interestingly the tickets show that the owners of vDOS declined to carry out attacks on Israeli sites to avoid drawing attention to themselves in their native land. The duo supposedly made $618,000 according to payments records dating back to 2014 in the data dump. “vDOS does not currently accept PayPal payments. But for several years until recently it did, and records show the proprietors of the attack service worked assiduously to launder payments for the service through a round-robin chain of PayPal accounts,” Krebs said. The operators of the DDoS service are believed to have enlisted the help of members from the message board Hackforums in laundering the money. Krebs warned that services like vDOS are worrisome because they make cybercrime tools available to pretty much anyone willing pay. In some cases, vDOS offered subscriptions as low as $19.99. These sorts of tools, also known as booter services, can be used ethically for testing how your site holds up against large swathes of traffic but in the wrong hands they can be abused and sold very easily. “The scale of vDOS is certainly stunning, but not its novelty or sophistication,” Ofer Gayer of security firm Imperva said but added that this new widespread attention on DDoS service might stall them for a while. Source: https://sports.yahoo.com/news/hack-reveals-inner-workings-shady-180952571.html

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Hack reveals the inner workings of shady DDoS service vDOS

DDoS Extortionist Copycats Continue To Hound Victims

It has been a while sine I wrote about this subject (or about anything at all for that matter) but, it occurred to me to today that the distributed denial of service (DDoS) extortionist issue is a problem that needs to be talked about again. Over the last couple years there have been a lot of websites come under attack from miscreants armed with all manner of distributed denial of service platforms and tools. Often these attackers would first launch an attack and then contact the victim company to say “check your logs to see we’re for real”. Once their bonafides were established they would then demand a sum of money to be paid in bitcoin or suffer the “wrath” of their DDoS attack that was more often that naught was severely oversold. There have been examples of criminal outfits like DD4BC who were true to their word when they made a threat. They would in fact follow through on their threat of an attack. This came to an unceremonious end a year ago when one of the main ne’er do wells was arrested by Europol. More often than naught however, these extortion gangs turn out to be little more than confidence tricksters. One such example was the Armada Collective. This was a criminal outfit that did little more than threaten targets but, with one lone exception, never followed through on the threats they made. Mind you, they did end up making a tidy sum of money from their victims. What this did accomplish was to set a precedent that has given rise to the copycat attackers. A prime example of this was an in an email that I received from a friend. His organization was threatened by a copycat group that were masquerading as the Armada Collective. Basically using the name as a hex sign. A brand name that could be used to possibly intimidate an organization. Here is a redacted version of the email that he provided to me. From: Armada Collective Sent: Subject: ATTENTION: Ransom request!!! FORWARD THIS MAIL TO WHOEVER IS IMPORTANT IN YOUR COMPANY AND CAN MAKE DECISION! We are Armada Collective. All your servers will be DDoS-ed starting Wednesday (Jun 29 2016) if you don’t pay 5 Bitcoins @ [Bitcoin wallet address redacted] When we say all, we mean all – users will not be able to access sites host with you at all. If you don’t pay by Wednesday, attack will start, price to stop will increase by 5 BTC for every day of attack. If you report this to media and try to get some free publicity by using our name, instead of paying, attack will start permanently and will last for a long time. This is not a joke. Our attacks are extremely powerful – sometimes over 1 Tbps per second. So, no cheap protection will help. Prevent it all with just 5 BTC @ [Bitcoin wallet address redacted] Do not reply, we will probably not read. Pay and we will know its you. AND YOU WILL NEVER AGAIN HEAR FROM US! Bitcoin is anonymous, nobody will ever know you cooperated. While people might not be aware that an organization had in fact cooperated, as per their email, they would be setting a horrible example. The more that companies pay extortionists like this the more emboldened that the criminals would become. This could potentially become a lucrative endeavor for the criminals. At the time of this writing 1 bitcoin was valued at roughly $628 USD. At a bare minimum there would be 5 bitcoin per email above, they would be raking in at least $3000 USD for each successful attack. Not bad for the cost of an email. If you are the recipient of an email like this, seek help to protect your enterprise. Do not feel compelled to pay the attackers. You have no guarantees that they won’t return. Source: http://www.forbes.com/sites/davelewis/2016/09/08/ddos-extortionist-copycats-continues-to-hound-victims/#2c6d7a7b4d06

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DDoS Extortionist Copycats Continue To Hound Victims