Tag Archives: security

DDoS defenses have been backsliding but starting a turnaround

Distributed denial-of-service attacks have been getting bigger and lasting longer, and for the past few years defenses haven’t kept pace, but that seems to be changing, Gartner analysts explained at the firm’s Security and Risk Management Summit. Gartner tracks the progress of new technologies as they pass through five stages from the trigger that gets them started to the final stage where they mature and are productive. The continuum is known as the Hype Cycle. DDoS defense had reached the so-called Plateau of Productivity – the final stage – in 2012, but then has moved backwards in the Hype Cycle in the past few years into the previous stage – the Slope of Enlightenment – says Gartner analyst Lawrence Orans. That fall, DDoS attacks were 10 times as large as any then seen hit Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, U.S. Bank and PNC Bank using botnets of compromised servers to generate high volumes of traffic against not only HTTP and HTTPS but DNS as well. They also went after protocols including TCP, UDP, and ICMP. That was followed up in 2013 by the use of NTP amplification attacks that used Network Time Protocol servers to swamp networks with responses to requests made from spoofed IP addresses in the target network. “That set DDoS back on its heels,” Orans says. But security vendors and service providers that offer DDoS protection have caught up, and Gartner’s Hype Cycle rating for DDoS defenses will shift again back toward the maturity end of the scale, he says. That’s encouraging because the number of DDoS attacks from the first quarter of 2015 to the first quarter of 2016 more than doubled, according to Akamai’s latest State of the Internet Security report, and mega attacks hit hundreds of gigabits per second. Attacks of 300Gbps and above can be handled by leading DDoS vendors, Orans says, and given the ready availability of DDoS attack kits, it’s important for corporations to pay for this type of protection. Competition among DDoS mitigation providers is increasing, so prices have dropped, he says. Flat fees per month were the norm for DDoS protection services, but now there are more flexible plans. Protection can come in three models. Providers sell access to scrubbing centers, where traffic during a DDoS attack is redirected to a provider’s network where the attack traffic is dropped and only good traffic returned to the customer network. This can cost $5,000 per month and up. Some providers he mentioned: Akamai, Arbor, F5, Neustar, Nexusguard, Radware and Verisign. Some ISPs offer this type of service at a 15% to 20% premium over bandwidth costs, he says. Some ISPs are better at it than others, so customers should check them carefully, particularly newer and regional ones. Many businesses have multiple ISPs, so they should do the math to see if it makes sense to use this option, he says. Some ISPs he mentions: AT&T, CenturyLink, Level 3 and Verizon. Content-delivery networks can also help mitigate DDoS attacks, he says, by virtue of their architecture. CDNs distribute customer Web content around the world so it’s as close as possible to end users. That distribution makes it harder for attackers to find the right servers to hit and diffuses their capabilities. This option isn’t for everyone, he says. It’s not as effective as the others and it doesn’t make sense unless a business needs a CDN anyway to boost its response time. Web application firewalls can help mitigate those DDoS attacks that seek to disrupt use of Web applications. They can be deployed on premises with gear owned by the customer, but internet-hosted and cloud-based WAF services are emerging, Orans says. Cloud-based WAF is fastest growing for mobile devices that must be deployed quickly, he says. Source: http://www.networkworld.com/article/3083797/security/gartner-ddos-defenses-have-been-backsliding-but-starting-a-turnaround.html

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DDoS defenses have been backsliding but starting a turnaround

DNS attacks cost businesses more than $1 million a year

New research has revealed that DNS attacks are costing businesses more than $1 million a year in lost business and service downtime. For years, DNS has silently and peacefully served internet needs, but it’s mostly been thought of as a trivial protocol requiring very basic configuration and monitoring. Despite its criticality, this service has never really been considered as a potential security issue, mostly because common usage leads people to believe it is a trivial protocol requiring very basic confguration and monitoring. But while DNS may have been safe and apparently secure for the last twenty years, because of its complexity and evolving role in the IT industry it has become a powerful attack vector, with 91% of malware using the DNS protocol. According to the new study from IDC and EfficientIP , the top three DNS attacks that have the largest impact on an organisation are Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS attacks, Zero-Day vulnerabilities and data exfiltration. These types of attacks are the main cause of business outage and data theft. But despite 74% being victims of DNS attacks, 25% of businesses still aren’t implementing any kind of basic security software. EfficientIP’s experts warn that existing DNS defenses are outdated and no longer work. Until now, the approach to IT Security has been one that has downplayed the risk of DNS threats, bundling them in with a wide selection of diferent network threats that can be protected using traditional security tools and techniques. It is an approach that threatens DNS security by overcomplicating architectures, adding slow and inappropriate layers of defence. While firewalls can protect on a basic level, on their own they;re not designed to deal with high bandwidth DDoS attacks, or detect DNS tunnelling attempts (the majority of DDoS attacks are now over 1Gbps), and most businesses still rely on the ‘out-of-the-box’ non-secure DNS servers offered by Microsoft or Linux servers. ‘The report has highlighted that despite the massive increase in cyber attacks, companies and their IT departments still don’t fully appreciate the risks from DNS-based attacks,’ said David Williamson, EfficientIP CEO. ‘In just under two years GDPR will come into effect and companies will be held responsible for all security breaches and could face major fines. It’s crucial for all businesses to start taking DNS security seriously.’ Source: http://www.information-age.com/technology/security/123461604/dns-attacks-cost-businesses-more-1-million-year-study

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DNS attacks cost businesses more than $1 million a year

Retail, gaming industries hardest hit with web application and DDoS attacks

Akamai published the Q1 2016 State of the Internet – Security Report, which provides a detailed view of the global cloud security threat landscape and in-depth analysis and insight into malicious activity. Multi-vector attacks accounted for 59% of DDoS activity in Q1 2016, reflecting a slight increase compared with last quarter (56%) During Q1, Akamai mitigated more than 4,500 DDoS attacks, a 125 percent increase compared with Q1 2015. As in recent quarters, the vast … More ?

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Retail, gaming industries hardest hit with web application and DDoS attacks

How visibility can help detect and counter DDoS attacks

It’s been proven that preventive medical strategies are more cost-effective for treatment and better solutions to support long-term health than reactive medical measures. Anticipating issues and preparing for and supporting healthy systems is simply more logical than troubleshooting and fixing things when they go wrong. The same concept has been successfully used in IT security for years and it should be no different when planning for DDoS attacks. But despite their relatively predictable nature and … More ?

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How visibility can help detect and counter DDoS attacks

DNS provider NS1 hit with multi-faceted DDoS attacks

Early last week, DNS and traffic management provider NS1 was hit with a series of DDoS attacks that lasted several days, and managed to impact DNS delivery in the European, American and Asian region. “Over the course of last week, we sustained dozens of large DDoS attacks, ranging in strategy from simple volumetric attacks, to complex direct DNS lookup attacks, to concentrated attacks against our upstream network providers and other vendors. These attacks are an … More ?

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DNS provider NS1 hit with multi-faceted DDoS attacks

Cybercriminals add DDoS component to ransomware payloads

Instead of just encrypting data files on a workstation (plus any network drive it can find) and locking the machine, a new variant of the Cerber ransomware is now adding a DDoS bot that can quietly blast spoofed network traffic at various IPs, according to KnowBe4. This is the first time DDoS malware has been bundled within a ransomware infection. It means that while the victim is unable to access their endpoint, that same endpoint … More ?

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Cybercriminals add DDoS component to ransomware payloads

Password reuse bot steals creds from weak sites, logs in to banks

If your Netflix password is your banking password, you’ll get what you deserve The perils of password re-use have been laid bare with the discovery of a botnet dedicated to finding account credentials on websites and testing the logins it finds on banks.…

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Password reuse bot steals creds from weak sites, logs in to banks

A million machines enslaved by MitM Google ad fraud botnet

Better the devil you know as malware replaces Alphabet ads with less sanitary banners About a million computers have been enslaved into a newly-identified botnet that is plundering Google advertising revenues, a security trio says.…

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A million machines enslaved by MitM Google ad fraud botnet

Viking Horde botnet malware lurks on Google Play

Five apps on Google Play carry Viking Horde, a new malware family that ropes Android devices into an ad-clicking botnet, but can also make them send out spam, send SMS messages to premium-rate numbers, download additional apps, and even participate in DDoS attacks. The discovery was made by Check Point researchers, and they have notified Google about it on May 5, but as I’m writing this, the apps are still available on Android’s official app … More ?

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Viking Horde botnet malware lurks on Google Play

Playbook: Prepare your business for DDoS attacks

Like any business initiative, good preparation and planning can go a long way toward making the DDoS response process as manageable, painless, and inexpensive as possible. Read the DDoS Response Playbok and find out: How you can effectively plan and execute your DDoS response plan What are the best practices for choosing and setting up the right mitigation solution for your organization What the steps and procedures for authoritatively responding to a DDoS attack. DDoS … More ?

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Playbook: Prepare your business for DDoS attacks