Turns out Twitter, Facebook, and LiveJournal weren't the only
sites hit hard by major distributed denial-of-service (DDoS)
attacks late last week, and their attacks definitely weren't the
biggest: More than 770 different DDoSes were spotted across the
globe last Thursday.
One DDoS attack that took out a 3G mobile operator in Asia's Web
portal was a powerful, 30 gigabit-per-second one, according to
Craig Labovitz, chief scientist at Arbor Networks, who has been
tracking the recent trends in DDoS attacks. The 30-Gbps DDoS was
unusually potent; most attacks average about 1 Gbps or less,
according to Arbor.
"There are hundreds of DDoS attacks any given day," Labovitz
says.
Lately it seems to be the year of the DDoS, starting wtih the
series of DDoS attacks in early July on high-profile U.S. federal
government Websites, as well as South Korean targets. The good news
is that researchers say, so far, there's no sign that the attacks
on government sites were any more than disruption tactics, rather
than a DDoS masking a more nefarious type of attack.
Then last week, the Twitterverse suffered tweet withdrawal on
when Twitter was knocked offline for several hours by an apparent
targeted DDoS attack aimed at a pro-Georgian blogger with accounts
on Twitter, Facebook, and LiveJournal. But while the DDoS grabbed
the attention of mainstream media and users, it was really just one
of hundreds of these attacks that occur each day.
DDoS attacks aren't sophisticated, nor are they stealthy. And
most of the time, they're basically just used as short-term
disruption attacks for protest purposes or, sometimes, extortion.
"I've been looking at these [DDoS] attacks for 10 years. It's odd
that 10 years later, we're still dealing with this problem," says
Jose Nazario, manager of security research for Arbor. "But it's
really easy to [launch] these kinds of attacks."
As a matter of fact, it's cheaper to build out a botnet to wage
DDoS attacks than it is to beef up your infrastructure with the
appropriate redundancy and capacity to defend against one, Nazario
says. "Configuring these devices [to combat a DDoS] is a big
challenge," he says. "We have tools [out there] to defend, but they
are not as cheap as running a botnet is."
Joe Stewart, Director of Malware Research for SecureWorks, says
DDoS attacks really haven't evolved much. "It's the same old DDoS
botnet tools that have been around forever. They haven't really
developed into anything more than we saw a few years ago in terms
of they're throwing at Websites," Stewart says.
But botnet operators who DDoS have plenty of unknowing and
willing recruits they can use to flood websites with bogus traffic.
And it's difficult for researchers and investigators to root out
the actual botnet behind a DDoS. "We try to help out and identify
some of these botnets. But a lot of times, it's [the attack] over
before we can even start marshaling all of this data together and
figure out where the attacks are coming from," Stewart says.
And DDoS attacks typically aren't waged from the world's biggest
botnets—the hundreds of thousands-strong spamming zombie
armies that are known for traditional spam, Trojans, and in some
cases, identity theft. The July attacks that hit the feds and South
Korea, for instance, came from a botnet of about 35,000 to 40,000
bots, SecureWorks' Stewart says. He says there are more than 1,000
botnets in reserve just waiting to DDoS. "Some are there because
someone likes to wreak havoc on some IRC [Internet Relay Chat]
network," he says. "A lot sit around idle."
Stewart says when he picks apart the botnets behind a DDoS, he
usually finds evidence that these attackers regularly wage DDoSes.
"It's obvious that these people are doing this daily...and their
biz and picking out sites to extort money from, or they are or mad
at someone, or [targeting] a competitor. They just launch these
attacks all the time."
And according to Arbor, many of these attacks go unreported.
The 100,000 to 300,000-strong spamming botnets, meanwhile, are
typically reserved for more lucrative malware and spam-spreading
campaigns, SecureWorks' Stewart says.
And it's a good thing they aren't DDoS'ing, he says: "I'm not
sure whose architecture could withstand a sustained attack from one
of those 100,000- to 300,000-sized botnets," he says.
It used to be that DDoS attacks were all about size and flooding
a router or sapping bandwidth, but that is changing, notes Arbor's
Labovitz. "Now they are more focused on services and applications,"
he says.
Either way, DDoS attacks aren't going away, experts say. And the
potential volume of these attacks on a day like last Thursday just
shows how the Internet can't really be protected from them,
SecureWorks' Stewart says.
"It's not possible today to prevent or eliminate DDoS attacks,"
he says. "We can do a better job of trying to trace them back to
the source and being more cooperative among different countries in
going after the people launching these attacks. But some attacks
are rumored to be state-sponsored: then what do you do?
"There's just no way to make DDoS go away," he says. "We're
going see these attacks continue to be effective."