Author Archives: Enurrendy

Update: Columbia’s website back online after cyber attack; KOMU down from DDoS attack

UPDATE: This story has been updated to include details of another denial of service attack on KOMU and additional comments on FBI involvement in investigating the attack on Columbia’s website. COLUMBIA — The city’s official website is back online after being down since Wednesday night, when a cyber attack flooded the server with information requests. But the hacker responsible might have found a new target in KOMU. The city’s site, gocolumbiamo.com, was back up as of 12:35 p.m. The site provides information and updates to the public about city services and events. Deputy city manager Tony St. Romaine said city officials have been in touch with the FBI about the incident. Joel Sealer, a spokesman for the FBI in Kansas City, said only that city officials had been in contact with the agency, but he would not comment on or confirm the existence of an investigation. St. Romaine said the activist hacker group Anonymous was the source of the attack on the city’s site, but a YouTube video posted by Bitcoin Baron denies that affiliation and claims sole responsibility for the attack. In the video’s introduction, Bitcoin Baron states that the attack is in retaliation for a February 2010 incident where Columbia police killed one dog and wounded another during a drug raid. The YouTube video then shows footage from the raid. The city’s website was hit by a distributed denial of services attack, which sent requests from multiple sources to the site’s server to overload its bandwidth capacity. City staff became aware of the problem at around 11 p.m. Wednesday and shut down access to the site to sort out the problem. KOMU.com’s outage began around 3 p.m. Friday, and KOMU posted on its Facebook page at 4 p.m. Saturday to address the distributed denial of service attack. In the post, KOMU calls the attack a “direct result” of its reporting on the city’s website being taken down. Its story noted that city officials believed Anonymous was responsible, but a third party contacted the news station to claim responsibility and threaten to take down KOMU.com as well. Attacks of this nature generally don’t result in the theft of information or other security loss, St. Romaine said. “Your system is not getting hacked into, and data is not getting compromised,” he said. Source: http://www.columbiamissourian.com/a/183192/update-columbias-website-back-online-after-cyber-attack-komu-down/

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Update: Columbia’s website back online after cyber attack; KOMU down from DDoS attack

PlayStation clambers back online 48 hours after DDoS attack CRIPPLED network

Titsup gaming service struggling to return to life Sony’s PlayStation network is slowly returning to normal service roughly 48 hours after it was hit by another major denial-of-service attack on Christmas Day.…

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PlayStation clambers back online 48 hours after DDoS attack CRIPPLED network

PlayStation clambers back online 48 hours after DDoS attack PARALYSED network

Titsup gaming service struggling to return to life Sony’s PlayStation network is slowly returning to normal service roughly 48 hours after it was hit by another major distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack on Christmas Day.…

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PlayStation clambers back online 48 hours after DDoS attack PARALYSED network

PlayStation clambers back online days after DDoS attack PARALYSED network

Gaming service STILL struggling to return to life Updated   Sony’s PlayStation network is slowly returning to normal service roughly 48 hours after it was hit by another major distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack on Christmas Day.…

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PlayStation clambers back online days after DDoS attack PARALYSED network

DDoS attack takes down City of Columbia website

Columbia Deputy City Manager says a hacker group took responsibility for the attack on GoColumbiaMo.com A City of Columbia official said the city’s website, gocolumbiamo.com, suffered a cyber attack Wednesday night, and the website will be down until further notice. Deputy City Manager Tony St. Romaine said Anonymous, a group associated with cyber attacks and hacking activism, took down the city’s website with a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack. St. Romaine said the group cited a drug-related SWAT raid in Columbia in 2010, where police shot two dogs in the house. A YouTube video shows a user taking credit for the attack, along with the SWAT raid from 2010. (Warning: the video contains strong language and graphic content.) A news release sent Friday morning said the city’s IT department was notified of an attack around 11 p.m. Wednesday. Deputy City Manager Tony St. Romaine told ABC 17 News IT staff worked through the night until 7 a.m. Thursday. The staff left the office, but continued to work from home. “This form of attack is an attempt to make an online service unavailable by flooding the website server with requests from multiple sources,” the release said. “In most cases, they involve forging of sender addresses so that the location of the attacking machines cannot easily be identified.” The release said this sort of attack renders city services provided online unavailable, and doesn’t compromise personal information. Source: http://www.abc17news.com/news/city-of-columbia-website-suffers-cyber-attack/30405572

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DDoS attack takes down City of Columbia website

Xbox Live and PSN Face DDoS Attacks Throughout Christmas Eve and Day

During a day when people are booting up their new Xbox Ones and PlayStation 4s for the first time, a group of Grinches have decided to try and ruin things for everyone online. During what is supposed to be one of the most joyful days of the year for families across the world, the hacker group Lizard Squad claims responsibility for hitting Microsoft’s Xbox Live and Sony’s PlayStation Network with DDoS attacks, Tech Worm reports. The Lizard Squad’s main Twitter account has been banned, but other representatives of the group (warning: NSFW language) are saying they are the reason why both Xbox Live and the PSN have been experiencing outages throughout the past 24 hours. In response, a pro gaming hacker crew called The Finest Squad has been exposing various members of the Lizard Squad to the proper authorities. Unfortunately, the deviant hacker group appears to always be a step ahead of The Finest Squad. Xbox’s servers are currently up, but they have been experiencing outages every few hours on the official server status page (which currently lists accessibility as “Limited”). The same could be said of Sony, as the official PlayStation Help Twitter made a comment about the PSN’s recent issues: Here’s to hoping these hackers get caught and the attacks stop. Go hack the Westboro or KKK websites instead of doing this sort of thing, Lizard Squad. Just leave the gaming community alone so we can play our new games in peace without bothering anyone. Source: http://arcadesushi.com/xbox-live-and-psn-face-ddos-attacks-throughout-christmas-eve-and-day/

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Xbox Live and PSN Face DDoS Attacks Throughout Christmas Eve and Day

DDoS attacks carry six-figure price tag for businesses

The average distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack costs large businesses an average of $444,000 in lost revenue and subsequent IT spending, according to a recent survey by B2B International. The same poll found that DDoS attacks hit the bottom line of small-to-medium-sized businesses (SMBs) at an average clip of $52,000 per incident. Kaspersky Lab sponsored the annual survey, conducted by B2B International, which polled 3,900 respondents from 27 countries about IT infrastructure challenges they faced from April 2013 through May 2014. All businesses at risk Businesses of all sizes were polled, with approximately 17 % coming from large enterprises (5,000 to 50,000 employees), 12% from the large/medium category (1,500 to 5,000), 25% from the medium/small (250 to 1,500) enterprise segment, and the remaining from small businesses. Overall, nearly 1 in 5 businesses (18%) experienced a DDoS attack during the year-long study period. The polling then drilled down into business verticals that provide online financial services or operate public-facing websites. Among this subset that relies on 24/7 web access for clients, the survey found that 38% experienced at least one DDoS attack during the study period. When this subset was broken down into specific business verticals, the poll found that 49% of IT/technology firms suffered at least one DDoS incident during the study period, followed by e-commerce sites (44%), telecommunications (44%), media (42%), construction/engineering (40%) and finance (39%). Downtime = Money The most frequent effects of DDoS attacks include slow-loading web pages, inability to complete online transactions, or complete service disruption – all of which weigh heavily on a business that relies on the web for revenue. Survey respondents listed potential losses in revenue (33%) and damage to company brand (38%) as the two most negative outcomes from a DDoS attack. This is in lockstep with their management’s concerns, who list loss of revenue (26%) and customer trust (23%) as the most feared outcomes of such an attack. A disconnect between the potential threat of DDoS and investments to detect or mitigate these attacks is apparent when dissecting the survey. For example, media companies were fourth on the list of most targeted, by only 38% of respondents from these firms listed DDoS countermeasures as a security priority. Among e-commerce respondents, whose businesses may be most heavily affected by the effects of a DDoS attack, only 41% noted DDoS security investment as a priority. “Even if a company does not have a public-facing website, its finances and reputation can be seriously affected by DDoS attacks”, said Eugene Vigovsky, head of DDoS protection at Kaspersky Lab, in a statement. “It is known that DDoS can be organized not only to incapacitate online services or for ransom, but also to mask other cybercriminal activities, such as targeted attacks…to gain access to confidential data.” Watching your availability When it comes to online security, most organizations tend to focus on the confidentiality or integrity of data and services, often at the expense of availability, noted Lenin Aboagye, Director of IT, cloud and product security for data center provider IO. He told DatacenterDynamics that companies experiencing DDoS-related downtime stand to lose money every minute their web services are affected. “If you operate a downed e-commerce site, and people cannot make a purchase especially during this holiday season, then losses can be substantial”, he added. “Most organizations do not look into this area of security because it’s not considered a data breach event that requires customer notification.” Source: http://www.datacenterdynamics.com/focus/archive/2014/12/ddos-attacks-carry-six-figure-price-tag-businesses

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DDoS attacks carry six-figure price tag for businesses

Alibaba : Cloud Suffered DDoS Attack for 14 Hours

A well-known game company on Alibaba Cloud Computing suffered a DDoS attack for 14 hours from December 20 to 21. However, Alibaba has not disclosed the name of the game company and why the company was attacked. Alibaba condemned the hacking attack and called on all Internet innovation companies to jointly resist hacking. Alibaba Cloud said in the microblogging “faced with hacker attacks, we cloud never compromise.” Source: http://www.4-traders.com/ALIBABA-GROUP-HOLDING-LTD-17916677/news/Alibaba–Cloud-Suffered-DDoS-Attack-for-14-Hours-19594653/

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Alibaba : Cloud Suffered DDoS Attack for 14 Hours

Rackspace restored after DDOS takes out DNS

25-hour incident blocked traffic from reaching rackspace.com and some subdomains Rackspace says it has recovered from a nasty distributed denial of service attack that it says may have seen “a portion of legitimate traffic to our DNS infrastructure … inadvertently blocked.”…

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Rackspace restored after DDOS takes out DNS