UPDATE: Oct. 26, 2016, 12:48 p.m. EDT This post has been updated to amend Dyn's analysis of the number of devices used in the DDoS cyberattack.
A massive cyberattack on Friday on a key piece of internet infrastructure included around 100,000 individual devices that were coordinated using a piece of computer code recently released online.
Dyn released an update of its investigation into the attack. The company initially said it believed "10s of milllions" of devices to be involved, but later found that legitimate traffic had been at first mistaken for part of the attack.
Dyn, the company subject to the attack, released more details about the incident on Saturday, including the finding that a base code known as Mirai had helped build the botnet that caused widespread problems for users trying to access many major websites.
"We are still working on analyzing the data but the estimate at the time of this report is up to 100,000 malicious endpoints. We are able to confirm that a significant volume of attack traffic originated from Mirai-based botnets," wrote Scott Hilton, Dyn's head of product, in a blog post.
The attack used Mirai code that combs the internet for connected devices with weak security, then hijacks them to be used in distributed denial of services (DDoS) attacks. A DDoS attack uses a heavy flow of traffic to target and disrupt particular systems, rendering them unusable.
Kyle York, the chief strategy officer at Dyn, announced the new details as part of the company's investigation into the attack.
He noted that Dyn's systems are back to normal, but that the company is still on the lookout.
"At the time of this writing, we are carefully monitoring for any additional attacks," he wrote.
Flashpoint, a cybersecurity firm that is working with Dyn, told Mashable that among the devices hijacked for the attack were digital video recorders.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
About 100,000 devices helped take down the internet via a cyberattack-款曲周至网
sitemap
文章
2323
浏览
3664
获赞
5
'Bring Your Kids to Work Day' didn't go so well for Sarah Huckabee Sanders
White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders probably thought holding a mock press briefing onHow to track NASA's James Webb Space Telescope
If you want to get your space fix without spending millions of dollars to be flung into the ether aApple might launch some very powerful Macs at WWDC
On June 5, at this year's WWDC, Apple is all but certain to launch an entirely new product category:Elon Musk says SpaceX internet service coming in about 6 months
If all goes according to plan, the public will have a chance to try out SpaceX’s satellite intTiger Woods won the Masters, and everybody loves a comeback
Dramatic comebacks are usually the stuff of sports movies, complete with sweeping music and tearfulAiming for Atoms: The Art of Making Chips Smaller
In the realm of computer chips, bigger numbers are often better. Morecores, higherGHz, and greaterFLGateway 2000: Gone But Not Forgotten
What does a cattle ranch have in common with computers? Admittedly not much, but that didn't stop aA SpaceX rocket launched, released a satellite, and landed overnight
While much of the United States was either sleeping or winding down their Saturday evening, SpaceX wWhy Google Maps might lose EV owners to Apple Maps (seriously)
After WWDC, electric car owners might want to consider Apple Maps over Google Maps.In iOS 14, AppleChaos at Twitter as Elon Musk throws employees under the bus to appease right
Over the past 24 hours, numerous Twitter employees, including its head of trust and safety, have resScientists film the elusive ram's horn squid in the deep sea
For likely the first time, biologists captured a wild, elusive ram’s horn squid, or Spirula spThe user behind @x on Twitter has no idea what will happen after the X rebrand
Over a weekend, Elon Musk announced he was "bidding adieu" to the entire Twitter brand and calling tFacebook criticized by Free Press for empty PR response to ad boycott
In the face of mounting advertiser pressure over its handling of hate speech, Mark Zuckerberg today11 Myths About Buying a New 4K TV
If you've looked into purchasing a TV in recent years, you've been perhaps overwhelmed by the jargonReddit's John Oliver
Popular subreddits are continuing to protest Reddit's upcoming API changes via the medium of comedia