Check out the great article in the wired magazine, regarding the power and menace of the bots and their controllers:
AT FIRST, IT LOOKED LIKE typical network congestion. So the system administrators weren’t too concerned when TypePad blogs and LiveJournal social networks flickered like a light bulb in a faulty socket. But 15 minutes later, at 4 pm on May 2, 2006, the sites went dark, and so did the mood at Six Apart, the company that owns them. In the blink of an eye, 10 million blogs and online communities disappeared. “It looked like the servers had freaked out,” CEO Barak Berkowitz recalls. Flash floods of data thundered into one network port, stopped inexplicably, then reappeared to overwhelm another. The engineers pored over logs, desperately looking for a cause. After an agonizing hunt, they found it: a distributed denial-of-service attack, or DDoS. Six Apart’s servers had been inundated with so many requests that the machines couldn’t possibly process them all. It was the digital equivalent of filling a fish tank with a fire hose.
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“After learning about bots, you might think, ‘I feel hopelessly outgunned and outmatched,’” says Peter Tippett, CTO of security consultancy Cybertrust. “You are.”
Its a fascinating look into how paid organized attacks are used to extract money or even shut down companies…It is still wild wild west in some areas of the Internet and without the limitations of the geography, its hard to see how we will be able to get a handle on these issues. This is going to be a big challenge.
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Skye B. (Who am I?)
7 months ago
Hmmm, not sure that this has anything to do with this article, however it does have to do with Service attacks. There has been a rather big attack against Cox Cable, or rather Cox Communications Company, over IP addresses. It seems that someone (Unknown persons) has attacked their systems, and all the IP addresses in Arizona, have a 98.——- in the beginning of their IP address, when it should be something like a 126.—- This has caused their systems to fail at reucurring times. One tech told me on the phone, that they had never had seen a 98.—- IP address, and it is making quite a mess within their systems.
Since, I have a program on a page, that shows IP addresses, not my blog, but another page that I have, I have seen the 98.—address with my own off and on. They just don’t know how to fix it, and it has caused quite a commotion within their company. The techs are scurrying to find and fix the problem, because what happens is that it shuts down your Internet at the most inappropriate times, and people are complaining to them everyday. Mine was down a few days in a row for hours, and I was none to pleased about it. It still shows up sometimes. So your IP address keeps changing, which is not a good thing.