Has Progress Been Made In Fighting DDoS Attacks?
alphadogg writes "As the distributed denial-of-service attacks spawned by this week's WikiLeaks events continue, network operators are discussing what progress, if any, has been made over the past decade to detect and thwart DoS attacks. Participants in the North American Network Operators Group (NANOG) e-mail reflector are debating whether any headway has been made heading off DDoS attacks in 10 years. The discussion is occurring while WikiLeaks deals with DDoS attacks after leaking sensitive government information, and sympathizers launch attacks against MasterCard, Visa, PayPal and other significant e-commerce sites."
How a large chain of treaties, relationships and friends slowly spiraled downwards through a set of "Hey, you said you would help if..." into basically a war of people who weren't even remotely connected to the original event (assassination of a prince from memory) and general chaos for quite a while.
Amazon, Paypal, Visa certainly weren't connected to WL in any way prior to this, but have shown relationships and friends, and of course this means that friends to WL have now escalated the parties. I do wonder where it will all end.
Moved to http://soylentnews.org/. You are invited to join us too!
The people attacking Wikileaks did. Wikileaks' troubles would be nigh irrelevant without the omnipresent glaring vulnerability that is DNS. The mirrors would all be signed wikileaks.org and the client would choose the closest available. Or something to that effect.
Some of the reported DDOS vulnerabilities were dead even before they were released to the public. Sockstress? Meet connlimit.
Adult Role Playing Forum
"sympathizers", when has this word ever been used in a good way
Nazi sympathizers
Russian sympathizers
Terrorist sympathizers
It's a term used to describe supporters of those who you think of as bad.
A neutral term would to be used is simply "supporters".
If I were to arrange a thousand people to turn up at the corporate headquarters of Visa, and then simply sit down on the ground outside the main doors, would it be a crime?
So, how can it be a crime if I achieve the same thing in cyberspace?
A number of sources have begun describing DDOS attacks not as cyber-attacks but rather as digital sit-ins that are completely legal. A DDOS (Note the Distributed) is basically a ton of people visiting the site at once so that others can't. In essence, the unknowing visitor to mastercard.com is also contributing to the DDOS by merely visiting the already flooded site (albiet in a small way) just as an unknowing visitor to a bank is contributing to a sit-in by disrupting the flow of work. Their mere presence is making the work more difficult. However, there is nothing illegal about one person visiting a bank and standing there, just like there isn't anything illegal with a number of people going to a bank... at the same time. Ultimately, the question isn't "has progess been made" to stop DDOS attacks, but SHOULD there be progress to stop them? Sounds like an easy question to answer but in the case of freedom of expression, it makes the waters a bit more muddied.
Carl Sagan quotes get you an automatic +5 on all posts.
If you are curious about the slightly deeper and murkier details, this will tell you why handling DDoS attacks is still difficult.
Never trust a spiritual leader who cannot dance -- Mr. Miyagi
The article talks a lot about botnets, but how many botnets are actually involved in the wikileaks attacks? I haven't read about any and my bet is that there probably aren't a lot. Why? Simple, the purpose of most botnets has turned from fun into profit. 10 years ago most of the botnets were designed just to screw with people, delete files, open ports, ddos ebay etc. However over the past 10 years a lot of the creators of botnets have found that they can use the botnets to generate lots of cash by moving spam, selling information etc. I doubt that very many of them would want to risk subjecting their botnets to discovery and removal by getting involved in in such a high profile attack.
Monstar L
You all may recall that the internet was designed as a peer to peer network. It was assumed that every node would have equal access to a decentralized network with many interconnects and pathways between each. The rise of DDoS attacks and other vulnerabilities is a direct result of the internet being used for other than it was designed: Businesses have forced a "one to many" relationship, a client-server architecture, and uneven upstream/downstream ratios. The centralization here is the weakness, not the internet.
The internet wasn't designed to support the business and organizational models that now dominate it. The solution to the DDoS problem is to decentralize, and restore a peer-based communication model -- that is how it was designed to be used. Of course, we could sit here and debate how to "save" the internet from "hackers" who are using the strengths of the network to great effect to attack those who built their solutions without much mind to the foundation.
#fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
How do you differentiate a DDoS attack from the usual slashdotting of a web site?
However, there is nothing illegal about one person visiting a bank and standing there, just like there isn't anything illegal with a number of people going to a bank... at the same time.
Actually, that is called trespassing and is very illegal, especially if you do not leave when they ask you to. While it is true that businesses are open to the public, that is not blanket permission. They are giving an invitation of, "come on in if you want to do business." If you don't want to do business, then you have no right to be there. Likewise, if you are accessing someone's network not involved in business with them, then you have no permission to be there and are violating the law.
In unrelated news, most of Amazon in Europe suffered an outage tonight. BBC story
"simply put, attacking a major online retailer when our parents are buying our christmas presents might affect us" -- what they really meant.
I think you've inadvertently stumbled upon the difficulties of fighting DDoS attacks. Sometimes it's just a flood of legitimate traffic with no malicious intent behind it at all.
Microsoft alone is responsible for majority of these. The old excuse of *this is because windows is most popular OS" is pure hogwash. When dozens of unix variants can update system components without requiring a reboot, it simply implies a horrible design on part of Microsoft. And the reboots and the required prompting for updates are what is responsible for at least half of the infected systems on internet. If the user needs to control the updates, it should be configurable, not the default. The reaction of your mom and pop, after seeing the usual "updates are ready" pop-up, is to simply ignore it.
Perhaps all that is needed is for someone to do an analysis of the compositions of Botnet systems and simply launch a class action suit against Microsoft. If they want to charge the public hundreds of dollars for a product that has a fixed cost and requires near-zero cost to replicate, they better be ready to provide a hell of a better product.
The backends of Visa and MC were never targeted for the exact same reason. Their corporate sites (largely symbolic, mostly useless) were taken down instead. Paypal is a bit of an exception, but they were too big for Anon to completely drag down. But they did manage to slow it and make their presence heard - Paypal released the remaining funds in Wikileaks' account.
In most cases I've found distributed DOS shields can't really scale over 10gbit/s, and even then they have to be manually started after noticing the attack vs. "heading off the attacks before they begin".
The proper action to stop future leaks is three-fold.
1. Stop classifying anything and everything. Classified documents should be classified for a damn good reason.
2. Stop behaving like arseholes and then expecting secrecy to protect you. There should be no reason for politicians to be embarrassed because they shouldn't be pulling this shit in the first place.
3. Yes, improve security. But not without the other twqo steps, because then we'll just get better protection for corrupt ass-hattery.