Category Archives: DDoS Vendors

Police website target of repeated DDoS attacks

A denial of service attack on Thursday morning to the Finnish Police website was the third attack of its kind this week. The website of the Finnish Police has been the target of repeated denial of service attacks this week, with the latest service disruption on Thursday downing the website for several hours. It marked the third such attack to the poliisi.fi webpage in the last few days. The first attack took place on Tuesday, and downed the website from late morning to 7 pm. Wednesday marked a smaller attack of the same nature. Tomi Moilanen, Chief Information Security Officer with the National Police Board, says the attacks have not led the police to implement any extraordinary measures quite yet. The attacks have also not detrimentally affected the various online services available on the site. The police have filed an investigation request with the National Bureau of Investigation in order to get to the bottom of the cyber attacks. Source: http://yle.fi/uutiset/police_website_target_of_repeated_denial_of_service_attacks/7891226

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Police website target of repeated DDoS attacks

Companies under DDoS Attack Fear Losing Business Opportunities the Most

DDoS attacks are now one of the most common and affordable cyberweapons. They are used by unscrupulous competitors, sinister extortionists or just everyday cyber-vandals. More and more companies, regardless of their size or business, are encountering this threat. And, according to the results of a survey conducted by Kaspersky Lab and B2B International, the majority of companies believe that revenue and reputation losses are the most damaging consequences of a DDoS attack. According to the figures, companies regard lost business opportunities – the loss of contracts or on-going operations that generate guaranteed income – as the most frightening consequence of a DDoS attack. 26 per cent of companies that encountered DDoS attacks regarded this as the biggest risk. Reputational risks (23 per cent) were viewed as the next most frightening consequence, likely to be since a negative customer or partner experience can drive away future contracts or sales. Losing current customers who could not access the anticipated service due to a DDoS attack was in third place: named by 19 per cent of respondents. Technical issues were at the bottom of the pile: 17 per cent of respondents identified a need to deploy back-up systems that would keep operations online as the most undesirable consequence, followed by the costs of fighting the attack and restoring services. The research also revealed that respondents from companies in different fields take different views of the consequences of DDoS attacks. For example, industrial and telecoms companies, as well as e-commerce and utilities and energy organisations, tend to rate reputational risks ahead of lost business opportunities. In the construction and engineering sector there is more concern about the cost of setting up back-up systems, perhaps because larger companies face higher expenditure on this kind of system. “ People who have not yet faced a particular threat often tend to underestimate it while those who have already experienced it understand which consequences might be the most damaging for them. However, it makes little sense to wait until the worst happens before acting – this can cost companies a lot, and not only in financial terms. That is why it is important to evaluate all possible risks in advance and take appropriate measures to protect against DDoS attacks ”, said Evgeny Vigovsky , Head of Kaspersky DDoS Protection, Kaspersky Lab. DDoS attacks on company resources are becoming a costly problem but only 37 per cent of the organisations surveyed said they currently have measures in place to protect against them. This is an unnecessary oversight at a time when the IT security market can offer reliable and easy-to-deploy security solutions that are able to prevent loss of access to online services caused by a DDoS attack. For example : Kaspersky DDoS Protection does not require the installation of heavy server solutions on the customer’s infrastructure. Traffic filtration during an attack is handled in special cleaning centers according to the tailor-made rules defined for each customer and each attack. The solution is backed up by Kaspersky Lab experts, whose many years’ experience of protecting against online threats allows them to detect attacks fast and block them, regardless of the intensity and complexity of the assault. Source: http://www.informationsecuritybuzz.com/companies-under-ddos-attack-fear-losing-business-opportunities-the-most/

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Companies under DDoS Attack Fear Losing Business Opportunities the Most

DDoS network attacks frustrate Brunswick County School officials

Officials with Brunswick County Schools and the Brunswick County Sheriff’s Office are investigating distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks on the school’s network. According to officials, the attacks have been occurring since county schools reopened in January and have been increasing in frequency that past several weeks. A DDoS attack is usually an outside attack that uses multiple computers or devices to flood a targeted network with so much traffic that it overloads and crashes the system or cripples the ability of legit users from accessing it. School officials say staff members are becoming extremely frustrated at the internet connectivity issues associated with the attacks. The Brunswick County School’s technology department has been working to try and mitigate the impact on the school’s network. Officials say that the county’s network infrastructure is being specifically targeted in the attacks, but the systems have not been compromised. A preliminary investigation has revealed that the individual(s) initiating the attacks have at some point been an authenticated user signed into the school’s network. School officials says this leads them to believe that the responsible party is a current or former student or staff member. Authorities are still investigating. Source: http://www.wect.com/story/28614292/ddos-network-attacks-frustrate-brunswick-county-school-officials

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DDoS network attacks frustrate Brunswick County School officials

Tengrinews experiences largest DDoS attack in Kazakhstan

Tengrinews news website has experienced an DDoS-attack today, a correspondent of the portal reports. “Today, starting from 9 a.m. Tengrinews.kz website was under a massive DDoS-attack (Distributed Denial of Service) aimed at causing a failure of its server. The log analysis showed that during the attack most of the traffic to the Tengrinews.kz servers were coming from infected computers and servers from around the world, including from Israel, and Western European countries: France, Germany, Italy and Spain. The attack was carried out from infected computers from more than 30 countries around the world. The technical department together with Kazakhtelecom information systems directorate limited access to the site to Kazakhstan IPs only for the duration of the attack,” the technical department of Tengrinews said. DDoS is a type of attack aimed to make an online service unavailable by overwhelming it with traffic from multiple sources, often infected with a Trojan virus. It is virtually impossible to stop such an attack by blocking a single IP address. IT-service of the news website said that the DDoS-attack was carried out from around 700 different IP-addresses simultaneously. “The volume of malicious traffic exceeded 3 gigabits per second,” the department said. After the attack ceased the access to the website was fully restored and the limitations were removed. The website is now operating normally. This is the biggest DDoS-attack on a news resources of Kazakhstan so far. Source: http://en.tengrinews.kz/internet/Tengrinews-experiences-largest-DDoS-attack-in-Kazakhstan-259509/

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Tengrinews experiences largest DDoS attack in Kazakhstan

Massive DDoS racks up $30,000-a-day Amazon bill for China activists

Site flooded with 2.6 billion requests an hour Chinese activist site Greatfire.org which masks censored traffic into the country is under a sustained distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack that is racking up $30,000 a day in server costs.…

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Massive DDoS racks up $30,000-a-day Amazon bill for China activists

Oklahoma City’s Website Hit With Two DDoS Attacks

The City of Oklahoma says its website was the victim of a second denial-of-service, or DOS attack, in as many days early Wednesday morning. At 7:44 a.m. the city tweeted its website was down, so KGOU reached out via the social media platform. Zach Nash is a creative manager for the City. He said they were being hit from Russia, China, and the United States by hundreds of computers infected by bots designed to send so much information to a network or a server that legitimate web traffic is blocked. “There was a Twitter account that said they were taking responsibility for it. They didn’t say why they were,” Nash said. Oklahoma City IT staff is working to get software installed to block any future attacks. “With the security world, there’s nothing that’s foolproof, but we’re trying to take steps to prevent this from happening again,” Nash said. So far there’s no evidence residents’ personal or confidential information was accessed. “Right now we know that it was a denial-of-service attack, which is different from a hack,” Nash said. “But we are monitoring that traffic and making sure, and if we do find out that happened, we will let people know as quickly as possible and take steps to mitigate that.” Source: http://kgou.org/post/oklahoma-citys-website-hit-two-denial-service-attacks

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Oklahoma City’s Website Hit With Two DDoS Attacks

Anonymous to BBC: Bring back Clarkson, threatens DDoS attack

The recent story involving our favorite power-mad petrol head Jeremy Clarkson’s suspension from the BBC has us all on the edge of our seats, as this latest controversy not only puts his future on Top Gear on shaky ground, but jeopardizes the show’s future in general. Many people have shown him support, from an online petition to British Prime Minister David Cameron saying he’s a fan. Clarkson’s got friends in high places, it seems, but according to a report, he’s got friends in low places, too. To recap how this all started, Clarkson allegedly threw a punch at a Top Gear producer during a “fracas” over not being served the dinner he wanted after a long day’s shoot. This has resulted in his suspension from the BBC along with the final three episodes of the show postponed indefinitely. Among the buzz of supporters, The Mirror is reporting that the activist group Anonymous has threatened the BBC with a DDoS attack if Clarkson isn’t reinstated. This kind of internet attack overwhelms a website with traffic requests, effectively shutting it down. The report claims that an open letter to the BBC made these claims, branding the hacker mission as #OpBringBackClarkson saying “You don’t wanna piss off 300 million people…” and “BBC you are warned… DDOS cannons will fire if you don’t comply.” Sounds like Ol’ Clarkson has the might of internet justice behind him, doesn’t it? A closer look tells a slightly different story. First off, there’s hardly an official source for a group called Anonymous for the obvious reasons, so its hard to peg for sure when someone is speaking on the organization’s behalf. Usually, associated twitter accounts like @YourAnonNews, which has over a million followers, indicate what’s trending amongst the cabal, and #OpBringBackClarkson really isn’t up there. Like, at all. As of this writing, eleven people have used the hashtag on twitter. Eleven. Looking at many of the Anonymous-branded twitter accounts and websites reveal that their uproar is more focused on things like the recent Ferguson protests and other serious issues of violence across the globe. Nobody is really talking about their favorite car show host. The Mirror’s article posts what seems to be the one Anonymous-related twitter post regarding the incident, but its handful of followers and tweets, in comparison to sources like @AnonyOps make it seem like an Anonymous fan rather than the voice of a movement. Surely then, this “open letter” would have more information? It might if you can find it. For all this talk of an open letter, any searches and stories posted simply refer back to the original Mirror article, with no links going to the BBC-directed open letter. In fact, after searching for hours, the only way we found it was to tweet the author of the post himself, who shared with us this link: http://pastebin.com/Kau1eP6N The letter doesn’t say much else beyond what we quoted above, save for linking to the Change.org petition and the recanting of Anonymous “we are legion” maxim. Pastebin is a great way to anonymously post text, but it doesn’t really work as an open letter forum unless you get the word out, and none of the Anonymous people are doing that, just The Mirror. We’re wondering if the BBC has even seen this. Again, the tricky thing about dealing with a group called Anonymous is, well, they’re anonymous. We’re not suggesting that this threat is false, but the evidence indicating that it might be is sketchy at best. Source: http://www.digitaltrends.com/cars/anonymous-to-ddos-attack-the-bbc-site-over-clarkson/

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Anonymous to BBC: Bring back Clarkson, threatens DDoS attack

CloudFlare launches nameserver DDoS shield

Hosed and hapless hosters to hide from hackers CloudFlare has launched a DNS proxy service it says will help organisations improve DNS resilience by pushing distributed denial of service attacks to the outer edge of its network.…

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CloudFlare launches nameserver DDoS shield

China online gambling bust; Korean site orders DDoS attacks on competitor

Authorities in China have broken up an international online gambling operation based in Hunan province. China’s official press agency Xinhua quoted Chinese police saying they’d detained 19 individuals following a two-month investigation. A further eight individuals have been targeted for arrest over their roles in the operation of the Shenbo Sun City website, whose servers were based outside the country. Police said the operation earned a profit of RMB 1.4b (US $$223m) between May 2013 and Oct 2014. Police have frozen approximately 1,000 bank accounts across China containing around RMB 200m. This marks China’s second major bust of 2015, having taken down a similarly large operation in Shandong province in January. Over in South Korea , authorities have arrested two ‘cyber security experts’ accused of targeting an online gambling site with distributed denial of service (DDOS) attacks. Intriguingly, the hackers were hired by another illegal online gambling operator intent on eliminating his competition. The Korea Times quoted the National Police Agency saying a man named Yang, the owner of an online security company, was paid a hefty KRW 1b (US $911k) since May 2014 to target the online gambling operator’s competitor on multiple occasions. Neither site operator was publicly identified by police. On Sept. 25, Yang reportedly hacked into 12k computers and commanded them to spam the targeted site with messages in order to crash its servers. Yang told police he’d agreed to don the black hat because his legal sources of income were “unstable.” Police are continuing to investigate to determine what other DDOS attacks Yang and his henchman might have launched. Source: http://calvinayre.com/2015/03/03/business/korean-gambling-site-ddos-attack-on-competitor/

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China online gambling bust; Korean site orders DDoS attacks on competitor

Companies expects others to protect them against DDoS attacks

One in five businesses surveyed believe that their online services should be protected against DDoS attacks by their IT service providers (in particular, network providers). However, this responsibili…

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Companies expects others to protect them against DDoS attacks