earlier on Twitter Krebs said he was hit by 665Gbps attack (so says Prolexic/Akamai). Could be ongoing/related.
____________ Justin Paine Head of Trust & Safety CloudFlare Inc. PGP: BBAA 6BCE 3305 7FD6 6452 7115 57B6 0114 DE0B 314D On Tue, Sep 20, 2016 at 8:21 PM, Mel Beckman <m...@beckman.org> wrote: > While I was reading the krebsonsecurity.com article cited below, the site, > hosted at Akamai address 72.52.7.144, became non responsive and now appears > to be offline. Traceroutes stop before the Akamai-SWIPed border within Telia, > as if blackholed (but adjacent IPs pass through to Akamai): > > traceroute to krebsonsecurity.com (72.52.7.144), 64 hops max, 40 byte packets > 1 router1.sb.becknet.com (206.83.0.1) 0.771 ms 0.580 ms 0.342 ms > 2 206-190-77-9.static.twtelecom.net (206.190.77.9) 0.715 ms 1.026 ms > 0.744 ms > 3 ae1-90g.ar7.lax1.gblx.net (67.17.75.18) 9.532 ms 6.567 ms 2.912 ms > 4 ae10.edge1.losangeles9.level3.net (4.68.111.21) 2.919 ms 2.925 ms > 2.904 ms > 5 telia-level3-4x10g.losangeles.level3.net (4.68.70.130) 3.981 ms 3.567 > ms 3.401 ms > 6 sjo-b21-link.telia.net (62.115.116.40) 11.209 ms 11.140 ms 11.161 ms > 7 * * * > 8 * * * > 9 * * * > 10 * * * > > Weird coincidence? > > -mel beckman > >> On Sep 20, 2016, at 6:46 PM, Hugo Slabbert <h...@slabnet.com> wrote: >> >> Lucy, you got some (*serious*) 'splainin to do... >> >> http://research.dyn.com/2016/09/backconnects-suspicious-bgp-hijacks/ >> http://krebsonsecurity.com/2016/09/ddos-mitigation-firm-has-history-of-hijacks/ >> >> -- >> Hugo Slabbert | email, xmpp/jabber: h...@slabnet.com >> pgp key: B178313E | also on Signal >> >>> On Sun 2016-Sep-18 22:25:44 -0400, Tom Beecher <beec...@beecher.cc> wrote: >>> >>> So after reading your explanation of things... >>> >>> Your technical protections for your client proved sufficient to handle the >>> attack. You took OFFENSIVE action by hijacking the IP space. By your own >>> statements, it was only in response to threats against your company. You >>> were no longer providing DDoS protection to a client. You were exacting a >>> vendetta against someone who was being MEAN to you. Even if that person >>> probably deserved it, you still cannot do what was done. >>> >>> I appreciate the desire to want to protect friends and family from >>> anonymous threats, and also realize how ill equipped law enforcement >>> usually is while something like this is occurring. >>> >>> However, in my view, by taking the action you did, you have shown your >>> company isn't ready to be operating in the security space. Being threatened >>> by bad actors is a nominal part of doing business in the security space. >>> Unfortunately you didn't handle it well, and I think that will stick to you >>> for a long time. >>> >>> On Tue, Sep 13, 2016 at 3:29 PM, Bryant Townsend <bry...@backconnect.com> >>> wrote: >>> >>>> @ca & Matt - No, we do not plan to ever intentionally perform a >>>> non-authorized BGP hijack in the future. >>>> >>>> @Steve - Correct, the attack had already been mitigated. The decision to >>>> hijack the attackers IP space was to deal with their threats, which if >>>> carried through could have potentially lead to physical harm. Although the >>>> hijack gave us a unique insight into the attackers services, it was not a >>>> factor that influenced my decision. >>>> >>>> @Blake & Mel - We will likely cover some of these questions in a future >>>> blog post. >>>>