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Another 100 Gigabit DDoS Attack Strikes — This Time Unreflected

darthcamaro writes "In March of this year, we saw the first ever 100 Gigabit DDoS attack, which was possible due to a DNS Reflection Amplification attack. Now word is out that a new 100 Gigabit attack has struck using raw bandwidth, without any DNS Reflection. 'The most outstanding thing about this attack is that it did not use any amplification, which means that they had 100 Gigabits of available bandwidth on their own,' Incapsula co-founder Marc Gaffan said. 'The attack lasted nine hours, and that type of bandwidth is not cheap or readily available.'"

4 of 93 comments (clear)

  1. Incapsula by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Seriously...this reads like a brochure for Incapsula's services lol

    1. Re:Incapsula by lazybeam · · Score: 5, Informative

      We are an Incapsula customer and I can tell you we were NOT "completely unaffected". We experienced about an hour total of complete down time and several hours of slow response. Our servers were unloaded - no problems when bypassing Incapsula. So I guess they protected us from "that" but in the meantime all sites were unreachable. Though different ISPs had different levels of slowness at different times (trying our two different office connections and three different mobile networks).

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  2. no real verifiable info but plenty of product plug by YesIAmAScript · · Score: 5, Informative

    The worst example of advertisement through press release in recent memory.

    At least on slashdot.

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  3. Re:How much bandwidth is that? by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Informative

    The attack peaked at 100 Gigabits per second
    The webhost (actually a CDN) had 400 Gigabits of total bandwidth available + various DDOS protections in place.

    RTFA

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