 Romney2012Defeat Obama 2012-Chg we can believe inPremium join:2002-03-03 USA kudos:4 3 edits | Cyber attacks hitting U.S. & S.Korean gov't sites Latest info does suspect North Korean involvement: »news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090708/ap_···r_attack |
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 SteveI know your IP addressConsultant join:2001-03-10 Yorba Linda, CA kudos:5 | said by Romney2012:Possible N.Korea or their ally China launching the attacks? Hmmm, I thought that North Korea was connected to the internet by a 28.8k modem, so I'm not sure they have the bandwidth to take out anybody. |
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 Romney2012Defeat Obama 2012-Chg we can believe inPremium join:2002-03-03 USA kudos:4 | said by Steve:said by Romney2012:Possible N.Korea or their ally China launching the attacks? Hmmm, I thought that North Korea was connected to the internet by a 28.8k modem, so I'm not sure they have the bandwidth to take out anybody. Their citizens don't get access. But gov't officials and agencies certainly do. And running botnets can be done from anywhere. -- My BLOG .. .. Internet News .. .. My Web Page |
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 SUMwarePremium join:2002-05-21 kudos:2 | reply to Romney2012 From Computerworld July 7, 2009 - quote: Online attack hits US government Web sites
A botnet comprised of about 50,000 infected computers has been waging a war against U.S. government Web sites and causing headaches for businesses in the U.S. and South Korea.
The attack started Saturday, and security experts have credited it with knocking the U.S. Federal Trade Commission's (FTC's) Web site offline for parts of Monday and Tuesday. Several other government Web sites have also been targeted, including the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT).
"The DOT has been experiencing network incidents since this past weekend. We are working with the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team [US-CERT] at this time," a DOT spokeswoman said Tuesday.
A spokeswoman for the U.S. Department of the Treasury confirmed that the Treasury's Web site had been hit with a denial-of-service attack. "We're working with our service provider to mitigate the impact," she said.
A spokeswoman for the FTC could not say what caused the outage at that agency's Web site, and the US-CERT did not return calls seeking comment.
Other targets have included banking Web sites in Korea, U.S. Bancorp, the U.S. Secret Service, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the U.S. Department of State, the White House, the U.S. Department of Defense, the New York Stock Exchange, the Nasdaq and the Washington Post, according to security researchers studying the incident.
The attack, while powerful, is not particularly sophisticated and appears to be more of a nuisance than a threat to security. It uses a variety of well-known distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks that try to overwhelm Web sites with useless requests and make them unavailable for legitimate users, security experts say. Most of the targeted sites appeared to be working normally on Tuesday.
Such DDoS attacks are relatively common, but a few things make this week's incident unusual. The botnet code behind the attack does not use typical antivirus evasion techniques and does not appear to have been written by a professional malware writer, according to Joe Stewart, a researcher with SecureWorks who has looked at the code.
On Saturday and Sunday the attack was consuming 20 to 40 gigabytes of bandwidth per second, about 10 times the rate of a typical DDoS attack, one security expert said after being briefed by the US-CERT on Tuesday. "It's the biggest I've seen," said the expert, who asked not to be identified because he was not authorized to discuss the matter. By Tuesday it was averaging about 1.2 gibabytes per second, he said.
Security experts estimate the size of the botnet at somewhere between 30,000 and 60,000 computers.
It is also unusual to see relatively low-profile government Web sites being hit. "Who goes around targeting a site like the FAA or the U.S. Treasury? It's not something that most people would think to attack," Stewart said.
The FTC in the past has brought actions against spammers and Internet fraudsters. Last month it shut down an Internet service provider called Pricewert, which had been associated with botnets, spam and child pornography.
No one knows who is behind the attack, although Stewart said it could have been launched by a single person. "It just seems to me that somebody is mad for some reason at capitalist governments," he said. Security experts say most of the infected machines are located in South Korea, but that doesn't mean the attack originated there.
The fact that the DDoS attack took down government computers is an embarrassment to the U.S., which is working to strengthen the country's cyber-security defenses under President Barack Obama.
"These are very basic attacks and stuff we've seen for a very long time. The scale of these isn't very huge either," said one security expert, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to discuss the matter publicly. "It's embarrassing that these sites have been hit for four or five days and they're still being affected. Think of the money that eBay and Amazon would lose in four to five days of this."
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 Its a SecretPlease speak into the microphonePremium join:2008-02-23 Da wet coast kudos:3 | Does this mean Einstein 3 is a failure? I can recommend a good tute on hosts files, and router config for them.
*scratches head in amazement* |
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 siljalineI'm lovin' that double widePremium join:2002-10-12 Montreal, QC kudos:17 Reviews:
·Bell Sympatico
4 edits | reply to Romney2012
Re: Cyber attacks hitting U.S. & S.Korean gov't sites More here > »www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2009···236.html
Updated New cyber-attacks hit South Korea. »www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2009···426.html
Updated Again Korean cyber attack to vaporize computer data. »www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2009···426.html
South Korea blocks IP addresses spreading computer virus »www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2009···tes.html
From Wired Threat Level
Lawmaker Wants Show of Force Against North Korea for Website Attacks
U.S., South Korean cyber attacks no more harmful than spam, experts say |
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 Dude111An Awesome DudePremium join:2003-08-04 USA kudos:10 | reply to Romney2012 If you want to read information about how the Big Corporations/government are using crap against us for the internet,read »www.slyck.com.
There on that site is an army against censorship!!! |
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Re: Cyber attacks hitting U.S. & S.Korean gov't sites said by Its a Secret:Does this mean Einstein 3 is a failure? I can recommend a good tute on hosts files, and router config for them. *scratches head in amazement* Yep it look that way that it is full of failure..
Einstein 1: Monitors Internet traffic flowing in and out of federal civilian networks. Detects abnormalities that might be cyber attacks. Is unable to block attacks.
Einstein 2: In addition to looking for abnormalities, detects viruses and other indicators of attacks based on signatures of known incidents, and alerts analysts immediately. Also can't block attacks.
Einstein 3: Under development. Based on technology developed for a National Security Agency program called Tutelage, it detects and deflects security breaches. Its filtering technology can read the content of email and other communications. -- "Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes" |
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 fatnesssubtleJanitor join:2000-11-17 fishing kudos:13 Host: Bright House Netwo.. Earthlink DSL TekSavvy Forum Feature Requ.. Need Site Help
1 edit | reply to SUMware said by SUMware:From ComputerworldJuly 7, 2009 - quote: No one knows who is behind the attack, although Stewart said it could have been launched by a single person. "It just seems to me that somebody is mad for some reason at capitalist governments," he said. Security experts say most of the infected machines are located in South Korea, but that doesn't mean the attack originated there.
So this means that the comment in the frontpage news article wanting to nuke someone...................is about nuking one guy?  |
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 | reply to Romney2012
Well my health is not the greatest these days so I have to rather restrict how much I laugh........but oh boy....this incident has me laughing so much I am ready to wet my trousers.................. A lousy DDOS ATTACK......awwwww gee whiz now come on.........doesn't anyone in the governments IT staff know how to handle a DDOS ATTACK.........don't they have any means to counter attack........good golly Miss Molly......I fall off the turnip truck a lot these days but this is downright outragous.........the gov has been screaming about internet security for the past four months an they were not prepared for this sort of attack.....what the hay happen to all those Hackers the gov was trieing to employ...........did the Super Computers blow a fuzz............ Certainly a massive DDOS Attack can bring down websites and Servers......no doubt about that........but no one would expect the government to be Bitch-slapped around like a 98lb weakling.............nawwwwwwww......... |
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fatness:
"So this means that the comments in the frontpage news article wanting to nuke someone...................are about nuking one guy? "
_______________________
LoL.....well the economy is bad.....think of all the money saved by just one Nuke.............. |
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 1 edit | said by The Snowman: fatness: "So this means that the comments in the frontpage news article wanting to nuke someone...................are about nuking one guy? " _______________________ LoL.....well the economy is bad.....think of all the money saved by just one Nuke.............. LOL but isn't this kind of fishy considering that old cyber security bill is up to be voted on... cough
Perhaps this is the true reason as if I remember it also gives obama the power to shut down the internet. -- "Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes" |
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cough, cough, cough, shhhhhhhhhhhhhh...........
FB......we are just to dumb to suggest such possibilities......cough, cough, ........
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darn all this coughing....I need Robitussin now. |
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 1 edit | reply to The Snowman said by The Snowman: cough, cough, cough, shhhhhhhhhhhhhh........... FB......we are just to dumb to suggest such possibilities......cough, cough, ........ Yeah I mean who are we to suggest anything but given the circumstances who knows but some reason I don't trust everything the government says is 100% true.
It was Rockefeller who compared the internet to a nuclear bombs and also said it shouldn't even exist.
More regulation is on the way..
"South Korea's main opposition Democratic Party accused the spy agency of leaking unconfirmed information in an attempt to build public support for a set of anti-terrorism bills that have been pending for months in the National Assembly amid opposition objections."
"The opposition party claims the anti-terror bills would give the spy agency too much power and could be used as a tool to infringe upon human rights." »www.google.com/hostednews/ap/art···99AFN0O0
Shhh it's a global grid.. -- "Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes" |
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 | '...Einstein 3: Under development. ... Its filtering technology can read the content of email and other communications...'
So reading civilians' email and voip HAS ANYTHING to DO with cyber attack????? |
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