Category Archives: Security Websies

Visual investigations of botnet command and control behavior

One of the classic debates in computer science concerns whether artificial intelligence or virtual reality is the more worthwhile pursuit. The advocates of artificial intelligence argue that computers…

See the original post:
Visual investigations of botnet command and control behavior

NSA.gov goes down after ‘error during scheduled update’

Spook agency denies DDOS, blames sysadmins The USA’s National Security Agency (NSA), lately the source of near-endless controversy for spying on just about the entire internet, has itself hit trouble online after its website went down.…

More:
NSA.gov goes down after ‘error during scheduled update’

Norks seed online games with malware in fiendish DDoS plot

Seoul police believe country’s love of gaming will be turned upon itself South Korea’s National Police Agency (NPA) is warning users not to download unofficial online games as they may contain malware designed by the North to compromise machines which can then be used to launch DDoS attacks on the country.…

View article:
Norks seed online games with malware in fiendish DDoS plot

IBM unveils new cloud solution

IBM announced a new cloud solution that combines software analytics and cloud security services to fend off web-based DDoS attacks for organizations doing business on the web and in the cloud. The new…

View the original here:
IBM unveils new cloud solution

Attackers use smaller botnets to launch high-bandwidth attacks

DDoS perpetrators changed tactics in Q3 2013 to boost attack sizes and hide their identities, according to Prolexic. “This quarter, the major concern is that reflection attacks are accelerating d…

Link:
Attackers use smaller botnets to launch high-bandwidth attacks

Google Project Shield protects “free expression” sites hit by DDoS

Before you ask: this Google’s Project Shield has nothing to do with NVIDIA SHIELD, the two being completely different elements – the Google iteration is all about protecting sites that’d otherwise have little to no protection. Google Project Shield makes with the barrier around a website to stop DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attacks to keep sites active. This project has been used to keep up all manner of sites that – before this project – had been taken down by the likes of governments and unfriendly hacker groups. This project has been used for several impressive sites in the recent past, Google aiming to make a much bigger deal of it in the near future. One example is the Persian-language social and political blog Balatarin. Another is quick-access site Aymta, kept up by Google in the face of DDoS attacks recently. This site provides early-warning (somehow or another) of scud missiles to people in Syria. Another example of this project is action is the keeping up of election monitoring service iebc.or.ke during a recent election cycle. Project Shield was responsible for keeping this site up for the first time – it’s stayed up for the entire cycle, that is – in history. Google is currently inviting sites in the following categories to join the initiative – webmasters serving: Independent News Human Rights Elections-Related Content Small independent sites in need of the infrastructure and resources Google is able to supply will be able to apply for help through the main Google Project Shield portal where some very, very simple information is required. Though the site says “invite only”, in this case, Google means that you’ll be invited if your application is accepted. There is also an “Other” category in the “type of content you host on your site” portion of the page in addition to those categories listed above. Source: http://www.slashgear.com/google-project-shield-protects-free-expression-sites-hit-by-ddos-21302260/

Read More:
Google Project Shield protects “free expression” sites hit by DDoS

How mystery DDoSers tried to take down Bitcoin exchange with 100Gbps crapflood

El Reg talks to anti-DDos bods – who UNMASK the target… Exclusive   Web security firm Incapsula helped a Chinese Bitcoin trader to weather a ferocious denial-of-service attack last month when the volume of inbound traffic to the site peaked at 100Gbps.…

Read the article:
How mystery DDoSers tried to take down Bitcoin exchange with 100Gbps crapflood

The Internet of Things: Vulns, botnets and detection

Does the Internet of Things scare you? It probably should. This DerbyCon video discusses why embedded device security is laughably bad, handling vendor notification, and setting up a dev environment t…

See the original post:
The Internet of Things: Vulns, botnets and detection