The Watch Ignite Vol. 3 Onlinecyberattack that immobilized a large chunk of the internet on Friday may have seemed complex. In fact, the type attack that hackers employed to cut off access to some of the world's biggest websites was strikingly simple.
The unidentified attacked used a DDoS — or "distributed denial of service" — attack, which send a huge number of requests to overwhelm servers. These attacks can take down websites or, as in Friday's case, target important systems and render them almost unusable.
It's one of the oldest types of cyberattacks, but it's gained a new twist as the method has grown in scale.
As the DDoS attack on domain name system (DNS) host Dyn was ongoing Friday, access to Twitter, Airbnb, Netflix, Spotify and a litany of other websites was limited. Those websites and many other rely on Dyn to connect their websites to users through the DNS system.
SEE ALSO: Sites across the internet suffer outage after cyberattackIt doesn't take particularly advanced hacking skills to block access to those sites. It just takes a huge network.
"DDoS attacks are popular because in some ways, they're easy to do. If you can generate enough traffic, you can overwhelm a web server," John Graham-Cumming, chief technology officer for internet security firm Cloudflare, told Mashable. "They're sort of the simple but large way of knocking a website offline. They're not sophisticated, but they do have real impact."
Friday's attack against Dyn was the second high-profile DDoS attack in recent weeks. Security blogger Brian Krebs was hit with a major DDoS attack in late September that he said at the time was the largest the internet had ever seen.
The hacker collective Anonymous made headlines with a DDoS attack in 2011 that was tiny compared to Friday's, Gizmodo pointed out. The first large-scale DDoS incident was in 1999.
Krebs on Friday tweeted that the firm Flashpoint had reported that day's cyberattack was launched by a botnet based off of the Miraibase code, which is used to hijack internet-connected devices and use them in DDoS attacks.
A huge number of "internet of things" devices, like connected refrigerators or other smart devices, have minimal security and could easily be looped into an attack like this.
"We seem to be in a bit of a season of DDoS attacks. People are using DDoS as a tool to knock things offline that they don't like," Graham-Cumming said. "I don't know the details of what Dyn is facing today, but it seems like the attacks we've seen over the past weeks and months."
On late Friday afternoon, Dyn said an "advanced service monitoring issue" was resolved, but the company was still "investigating and mitigating" attacks on its infrastructure.
DDoS attacks are a brute force way to take down a server. The attacks can take down particular websites or particular systems that can provide a service to numerous websites.
The video below provides a visualization of what a DDoS attack looks like. In the video, a variety of bots attack a particular part of VideoLAN, a volunteer organization that makes open source software.
Topics Cybersecurity
How to use the iOS 17 contact sharing feature — quickly swap phone numbers with NameDropBest Echo Show 5 deal: Save $50 on the Echo Show 5 (3rd gen, 2023) at AmazonLocal affirmations accounts on Instagram help Gen Z feel less aloneTomorrow Is a Drag, ManLos Angeles Through the Eyes of Eve BabitzTwitter/X's headline update is another blow to the site's accessibilityWould a Tumblr girl ever buy this $68 'I <3 Tumblr' tee?Letters from VladivostokNicolas Cage's Reddit AMA was a nostalgic, honest delightAnatomy of a Cover: The Complete Works of Flannery O’Connor by J. C. GabelA Letter from COP21An Interview with “Splendidly Cranky” Utopian Curtis WhiteThis fat bear won't win Fat Bear Week. But the bears know he's king.Amazon Fire 7 Kids tablets on sale for 50% off ahead of Prime DayBest Echo Show 5 deal: Save $50 on the Echo Show 5 (3rd gen, 2023) at Amazon“Sonnet,” an Unpublished Poem by Delmore SchwartzReading Flannery O’Connor in the Age of IslamophobiaIn “Brodsky / Baryshnikov,” the Resurrection of a Dead PoetEverything I Know About James Bond I Learned in KindergartenHow Reddit's r/place became a way to show support for Ukraine 'Hearthstone: Journey to Un'Goro' expansion bringing 135 new cards in April Why Kellyanne Conway was on the couch and oh lord this is so dumb Netflix: We will stream to your eyeballs, or VR, or um whatever the future is What will the new presidential administration change about online payments? I sat in Peugeot's Instinct concept car and it told me to relax Benedict Cumberbatch just landed his dream role by giving it to himself That Oscars screw You might want to rethink what you're 'liking' on Facebook now Redux tech turns the smartphone screen into a speaker Move over Emily Dickinson, Grindr has a poet in residence Bill Nye is only taking selfies with climate Just a load of animals with pancakes because humans are weird New Lego set blasts off to space with an all Beyoncé's mom accidentally went live on Instagram and we have so many questions Engineer alleges culture of sexism and discrimination at Tesla If footage of this ethereal jellyfish doesn't calm you, nothing will SpaceX wants to send 2 people around the moon in 2018 B.J. Novak doesn't like Casey Affleck either Mean NASA frozen yogurt robot makes a small girl cry Trump is low key taking credit for the Oscars flub because of course he is
2.3568s , 8223.09375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Ignite Vol. 3 Online】,Co-creation Information Network