DDoS packets soak up to 3 per cent of net traffic
To appreciate the strain online miscreants are putting on internet infrastructure, consider this: As much as three per cent of the net's traffic is malicious garbage designed to inflict damage one party or another, Arbor Networks estimates.
The endless barrage of malicious packets comprise about 1,300 distributed denial of …
This topic is closed for new posts.
Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 08:24 GMT
Graham Robinson
Holidays
#
"perhaps while the miscreants are either hung over or expending their spoils."
Or perhaps a massive amount of the compromised computers are in businesses that don't know how to secure their systems, which have them turned off on those days.
Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 09:00 GMT
Mike
"Assuming 66 per cent of that is spam"
#
I guess you're either referring to what comes out after being run through a spam filter, or you're very lucky
Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 10:47 GMT
Anonymous Coward
And the rest!
#

3%?
Make that 14% according to my logs!
Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 13:19 GMT
Adam
New Years Day etc?
#
My few experiences of DoS attacks appeared to originate from script kiddies, who are invariably frustrated 14 year olds who lack the social skills to attend any sort of New Year's Eve celebration...
I'm truely astounded.
Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 14:02 GMT
bogsheet
Data Culling?
#
"according to the data, which was culled over 18 months."
Culling refers to the minimising or reduction of the amount of data to acquire a smaller set. I wonder if this verb has been used correctly here, as in the context it appears that the data was simply collected.
Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 18:56 GMT
Adrian Midgley
any of it not from Windows installations?
#
I suppose there may be the odd compromised *x box, but almost all of this is made possible through design desicions and features of one particular operating system family, which appear to have been either unwise in retrospect, or effective in degrading un-owned systems.
This topic is closed for new posts.