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Lizard Squad Member Arrested in the UK

Police primarily interested in suspect PayPal activity but also searching for links to DDoS attacks. While the FBI has confirmed that it is investigating Lizard Squad following the group’s PlayStation Network and Xbox Live DDoS attacks over Christmas, the first arrest has been made by British police. The South East Regional Organized Crime Unit (SEROCU) in the UK announced the arrest of a member of cyberattack group Lizard Squad in a press release. The English law-enforcement agency has placed 22-year-old Vinnie Omari in custody, and according to documents obtained by journalist Brian Kerbs, Omari identified as a member of Lizard Squad. The warrent issued to Omari made clear that the police were primarily concerned about suspicious activity related to stolen PayPal accounts which occured well before the PSN and XBL attacks. “The South East Regional Organised Crime Unit has arrested a 22-year-old man from Twickenham on suspicion of fraud by false representation and Computer Misuse Act offences,” the press release reads. “The arrest yesterday is in connection with an ongoing investigation in to cyber fraud offences which took place between 2013 and August 2014 during which victims reported funds being stolen from their PayPal accounts.” In an email to The Daily Dot, Omari said police were looking for anything to connect him to the DDoS strikes, and confiscated his laptops, Xbox One, phone, and USB memory drives. Source: http://www.gameranx.com/updates/id/25873/article/lizard-squad-member-arrested-in-the-uk/

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Lizard Squad Member Arrested in the UK

How Mega founder Kim Dotcom helped Xbox Live, PSN recover from Lizard Squad’s DDoS attack

How Kim Dotcom helped stop holiday Xbox Live and PSN DDoS attacks Over the Christmas holiday, a loosely organized group of hackers known as Lizard Squad took down Microsoft’s online gaming service, Xbox Live (XBL), as well as Sony’s online gaming platform, PlayStation Network (PSN), through coordinated denial-of-service attacks (DDoS). But the legally embattled owner of Mega, Kim Dotcom, may have offered the olive branch that helped both online gaming services slowly come back online. DDoS attacks are implemented by either forcing the targeted network’s service or website to reset, or by consuming its resources at such a high level that it can no longer function. While relatively simple and not considered “hacking” by security experts, large-scale DDoS attacks, like those against Xbox Live and the PlayStation Network, require the use of massive “botnets,” compromised computers all working in unison to overwhelm a service. This meant that for the majority of the holiday, including Christmas Day and Boxing Day, two of the highest traffic online gaming days of the year, most people were unable to access either Xbox Live or PSN. While Lizard Squad’s motivations for the attacks are still unclear, the group claims they want Microsoft and Sony to improve security on their online services. Just like many online attacks of this kind, it’s more likely they were perpetrated simply because they were possible, especially since preventing a DDoS attack is difficult regardless of how secure a network is. The controversy surrounding the attacks also involved a rival hacking group, The Finest Squad, allegedly attempting multiple times to take down Lizard Squad over the course of the holidays through their own DDoS attacks and by “doxing,” releasing the personal information of Lizard Squad members. These efforts ultimately failed and both PSN and XBL remained offline until Dotcom intervened. Lizard Squad and The Finest Squad also frequently traded insults through social media and on popular YouTube hacking-focused talk show, DramaAlert. This is where Kim Dotcom comes in: contacting Lizard Squad directly and promising the group 3,000 $99 Lifetime accounts, worth approximately $300,000 in total, for his encrypted upload service, Mega, if they stopped their DDoS assault on XBL and PSN. Lizard Squad also credited Dotcom with being the main peacemaker in terms of getting the attacks to stop. Despite one faction of Lizard Squad claiming all attacks have ceased, another faction of the group reportedly continued disrupting XBL and PSN, creating free digital game listings for Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare and Destiny. When both services went back online they were also overwhelmed with thousands of users trying to log into their profiles simultaneously, creating additional difficulties for Microsoft and Sony’s online infrastructure. However, As of Dec. 30th, both Xbox Live and the PlayStation Network are running relatively smoothly. Despite playing an important role in getting both gaming services back online, some have criticized Dotcom for setting a dangerous precedent by giving away free Mega accounts to malicious hackers. Other recent high-profile hacking incidents include a group of hackers known as the Guardians of Peace gaining access to Sony’s internal network and leaking a number unreleased films, and also threatening a terrorist attack if the controversial movie The Interview was released. Source: http://business.financialpost.com/2014/12/30/how-mega-founder-kim-dotcom-helped-stop-holiday-xbox-live-and-psn-ddos-attacks-by-appeasing-lizard-squad/?__lsa=7896-d0fe

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How Mega founder Kim Dotcom helped Xbox Live, PSN recover from Lizard Squad’s DDoS attack

DDoS attack on Swedish Parliament’s website

The official website of the Swedish Parliament was taken down on Tuesday, in what officials labelled “an outside attack”. The website, riksdagen.se, was taken down at 11am on Tuesday, with visitors met by a blank screen. By 2pm, the website was up and running again, but officials confirmed that the problem had not been caused by any internal IT troubles. “It went down because of an attack from the outside,” Riksdag spokesperson Anna Olderius told the TT news agency. “But we refuse to comment on security issues in any more detail than that.” The cyber attack marks the second against the website in the past two years. In October 2012, the website went down together with that of the country’s central bank other government websites, news networks, and university home pages. Hacktivist network Anonymous claimed responsibility for the October attacks. “You don’t fuck with the internet,” the group wrote online, in what was apparently a response to police raids on the previous hosts to The Pirate Bay and WikiLeaks. The attacks were carried out via a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS), where a website is bombarded with communication requests so that the servers become overloaded and the site crashes. As yet, no one has claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s attack. Source: http://www.thelocal.se/20141230/cyber-attack-hits-government-website

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DDoS attack on Swedish Parliament’s website

‘Bitcoin Baron’ claims credit for City of Columbia, KOMU DDoS attacks

He cited a 2010 SWAT raid in Columbia as his motivation behind the DDoS attacks. An individual is taking credit for the distributed denial of service attacks on the websites of the City of Columbia and KOMU-8 on Friday. KOMU posted about the attack on its Facebook page at 3:48 p.m. Friday, about three hours after the station had reported on a similar attack on the City of Columbia’s website earlier Friday. KOMU’s article included a statement from Assistant City Manager Tony St. Romaine indicating the activist group Anonymous was behind the attacks. Shortly after their site was attacked, KOMU received an email from a third party who indicated that he, not Anonymous, was behind both attacks. KOMU General Manager Marty Siddall said the individual referred to himself as “Bitcoin Baron.” Through his Twitter, Bitcoin Baron has connected himself to multiple other DDoS attacks. Bitcoin Baron said in a video that his motivation behind the attacks was a 2010 Columbia SWAT raid on the house of Jonathan Whitworth, who was presumed to be a marijuana dealer. During the raid, one of Whitworth’s dogs was fatally shot in front of his wife and child. “I decided that this should go viral once more to show everyone the true nature of how you and every police department does things,” Bitcoin Baron said in his video. Bitcoin Baron said in a tweet that no data was affected by any of the DDoS attacks. Prasad Calyam, assistant professor of computer science with a technical focus in cyber security, said DDoS attacks occur when a user creates a large amount of fake traffic that accesses a site’s servers all at once to crash the site. “(A DDoS attack) is a sort of brute force attack, where many machines are compromised to act like regular users in order to block real users from reaching the site,” he said. Calyam said DDoS attacks cannot be stopped as they occur, and he advised that locally blocking a website is the best way to deal with an attack. “(That is) because it’s hard for an Internet provider to block people from accessing your site,” he said. “The only way to prevent attacks is through an intrusion detection system, which can be really expensive … There are open source intrusion detection systems available, but they must be maintained and managed by experts.” Siddall said KOMU is working with their third-party Internet provider to prevent future attacks. Source: http://www.themaneater.com/stories/2014/12/29/bitcoin-baron-claims-credit-city-columbia-komu-ddo/

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‘Bitcoin Baron’ claims credit for City of Columbia, KOMU DDoS attacks

Sony issues formal response to DDoS attacks in PSN update

For the first time in days, Sony has issued a formal response to the ongoing distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) affecting various networks in the gaming industry, including PlayStation Network. While the update doesn’t offer much in terms of when PlayStation owners can expect full service to resume, Sony has at least assured us that they are working to restore full network access. Note: An update on Sony’s official support page notes that service is restored on PS3 and Vita; however, PSN is still down on PS4. A special section of the website is dedicated to PSN post-restoration that says if you are continuing to experience problems after PSN services are fully restored to refer to Contact Support. Here’s the full message from Catherine Jensen, VP of SCEA Consumer Experience. The video game industry has been experiencing high levels of traffic designed to disrupt connectivity and online gameplay. Multiple networks, including PSN, have been affected over the last 48 hours. PSN engineers are working hard to restore full network access and online gameplay as quickly as possible. From time to time there may be disruptions in service due to surges in traffic, but our engineers will be working to restore service as quickly as possible. If you received a PlayStation console over the holidays and have been unable to log onto the network, know that this problem is temporary and is not caused by your game console. We’ll continue to keep you posted on Twitter at @AskPlayStation and we’ll update this post once the problems subside. Thanks again for your patience. The DDoS attacks on PSN (and Xbox LIVE) began around Christmas Day. Though neither Sony nor Microsoft admitted to being DDoS’d, the notorious hacker group Lizard Squad was eager to claim credit. For those unfamiliar, this is the same group that launched multiple attacks earlier this year, including bomb threats to SOE president John Smedley. On Friday, one of the numerous Twitter accounts claiming to be Lizard Squad said the DDoS attacks were stopped and that any ongoing disruptions were “just the aftermath” of hours worth of traffic bombardment. However, another account claiming to be one of the prominent members of Lizard Squad, continued to tweet out messages suggesting the DDoS attacks were continuing. Even now, two days after Christmas, PSN is still struggling to return to full service; although, some believe it to be Sony simply restructuring its system architecture. At this point it’s still not 100 percent certain if the outages are ongoing DDoS attacks, but it appears for now at least that Sony has a grasp on the problem and is working to restore service. Hopefully they are addressing the issues and even working to prevent this sort of thing from happening in the future. Considering this isn’t the first time PSN has been brought down for a lenghty period, I’m hoping Sony will finally take some serious action in preventing this sort of outage again. But, I’m also skeptical; if they haven’t learned by now, when will they? Source: http://www.gamezone.com/news/sony-issues-formal-response-to-ddos-attacks-in-psn-update-9048-jrni

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Sony issues formal response to DDoS attacks in PSN update

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

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

Garden-variety DDoS attack knocks North Korea off the Internet

Experts cite the fragility of North Korea’s connection, note that routine DDoS attacks could have easily forced the country offline The simplest explanation for North Korea’s suddenly dropping off the Internet was a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack that overwhelmed the isolated nation’s tenuous connection to the rest of the world, experts said Monday. North Korea’s Internet connection went down around 11 a.m. ET Monday, and was restored about nine and a half hours later, at approximately 8:45 p.m. ET. But within hours, some sites checked by Computerworld , including North Korea’s official news agency, were again offline. A DDoS attack could have been launched by a small group or even an individual, the researchers said. “If it turns out it was an attack, I’d be far more surprised if it was a government launching the attack than I would if it was a kid in a Guy Fawkes mask,” said Matthew Prince, co-founder and CEO of security firm CloudFlare, in an email. Prince and others bet that a run-of-the-mill DDoS attack took down North Korea’s Internet because the isolated country has a “pipe” to the Internet so narrow that a routine attack could easily flood its capacity and take it offline. Ofer Gayer, security researcher at Incapsula, estimated North Korea’s total bandwidth at 2.5 Gbps, far under the capacity of many recent DDoS attacks, which typically are in the 10Gbps to 20Gbps range. “Even if North Korea had ten times their publicly reported bandwidth, bringing down their connection to the Internet would not be difficult from a resource or technical standpoint,” Gayer said, also in an email. Almost all of North Korea’s Internet traffic passes through a connection provided by China Unicom, the neighboring country’s state-owned telecommunications company. North Korea has just a single block of IP (Internet protocol) addresses, or just 1,024 addresses, another vulnerability; in comparison, the U.S. boasts 1.6 billion IP addresses. “When organizations –- nation states or commercial entities -– rely on a single Internet service provider and a small range of IP addresses, they make themselves easy prey,” Gayer said. “Attackers have a single target -– the one connection to the Internet backbone –- to flood with traffic.” According to Prince of CloudFlare and Jim Cowie, chief scientist at Dyn Research, North Korea — officially named the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) — went completely dark after a weekend of intermittent connectivity. For example, Computerworld was unable to reach the DPRK’s Central News Agency, its official mouthpiece, much of Sunday, Dec. 21. The IDG News Service, which like Computerworld is owned and operated by IDG, reported Monday that North Korea had fallen off the Internet. North Korea’s outage might have gone unreported but for the November hack of Sony Pictures; the release of gigabytes of the Hollywood studio’s internal documents; Sony yanking The Interview , a comedy that portrayed the assassination of Kim Jung-un, the country’s dictator, after hackers threatened American theaters; and the U.S. government’s contention that North Korea was responsible. In comments last week, President Obama said, “We will respond proportionally [to North Korea], and we will respond in a place and time and manner we choose.” But it’s far more likely that North Korea’s connection to the world was severed by hacktivists or cyber terrorists than by the U.S., or any other nation, the researchers said. Dan Holden, the director of Arbor Networks’ security engineering and response team, said the attacks were relatively small in scale — the weekend peak was just shy of 6 Gbps — and among other targets, took aim at the primary and secondary DNS (domain name system) servers for most websites in North Korea. “It’s not as if a super sophisticated attack is needed in order to cripple it,” Holden said in a Monday blog. Holden also pointed out that a pair of hacktivist cyber-terrorist groups, Anonymous and Lizard Squad, had taken to Twitter to threaten to attack North Korea. Both groups have used DDoS attacks in the past to knock sites offline. Prince of CloudFlare posed other possibilities, ranging from North Korea purposefully cutting itself off from the Internet — a move other authoritarian regimes have made, such as Syria — to China Unicom breaking the connection. But Prince leaned toward the DDoS theory. “Given the largest DDoS attacks are an order of magnitude larger than [North Korea’s capability], it is conceivable that an attack saturated the connection and knocked the site offline,” Prince said. “It’s worth remembering that just a few weeks ago a teenager in the U.K. pleaded guilty for single-handedly generating a 300Gbps attack against Spamhaus.” Prince’s reference was to the 17-year-old arrested this summer and charged with launching a massive DDoS attack in March 2013 against the anti-spam organization. Cowie of Dyn Research concurred with the other experts who pointed to the flimsiness of North Korea’s Internet connection, although like Prince, he said there might have been causes other than a DDoS. “A long pattern of up-and-down connectivity, followed by a total outage, seems consistent with a fragile network under external attack,” Cowie said in a Monday blog. “But it’s also consistent with more common causes, such as power problems.” North Korea did not mention the outage on its news website late Monday before it again went dark, but it did include a rambling 1,700-word missive from the National Defense Commission (NDC), the agency that controls the country’s huge military forces. The NDC sharply threatened the U.S. with retaliation if a cyberattack was launched against the DPRK. “The army and people of the DPRK are fully ready to stand in confrontation with the U.S. in all war spaces including cyber warfare space to blow up those citadels,” the NDC said in a bellicose statement. “Our toughest counteraction will be boldly taken against the White House, the Pentagon and the whole U.S. mainland, the cesspool of terrorism, by far surpassing the ‘symmetric counteraction’ declared by Obama.” Source: http://www.computerworld.com/article/2862652/garden-variety-ddos-attack-knocks-north-korea-off-the-internet.html

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Garden-variety DDoS attack knocks North Korea off the Internet