So I couldn't get to mjtnet.com this afternoon. Also had issues reported to me that email to certain customers were returned as undeliverable. Otherwise every search and every link I selected all day worked flawlessly. Never Occurred to me that there might be a major internet DNS server compromised.
One individual is taking "credit" for the attack. The question I have is not WHY but HOW? How does a person acquire the resources and time to accomplish such a useless endeavor? I have lots of things I'd like to accomplish and I have no time to accomplish them. And forget money. Not that I'm impoverished but there will never be money for mega computers and connectivity on the order needed to pull off this kind of foolishness.
Sorry if this is considered political... just delete it.
GoDaddy DoS
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What he said. You don't need money or mega computers when there are trillions of insecure home PCs connected to the Web that you can exploit.
mjtnet.com was unaffected. At least we had no issues throughout.
mjtnet.com was unaffected. At least we had no issues throughout.
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Not a DDOS, not that anon dude, but a major screw up at godaddy. As a godanica customer I'm torn between that being good news, or bad news
Meanwhile, on the subject of script kiddies, scary article about the amount of damage a bored 16 year old and weak security procedures can do.
Meanwhile, on the subject of script kiddies, scary article about the amount of damage a bored 16 year old and weak security procedures can do.
Sorry, poorly worded run-on sentences. Let me rephrase.
The article explains really well what hacking really is about. And this 15 year old seems to be really good at the social engineering aspect of gathering info.
Next paragraph:
And it isn't just weak security procedures. If people are able to be conned into divulging information, there is no security. I'm thinking of other articles I've read where the hacker calls the front desk of ABC Corp and says to the receptionist. "Hey... this is Bob down in IT... I have an emergency and I need your login information right away."
You are correct, the scariest aspect of this article is how easy it was for these children to acquire the info needed to break into accounts in high profile, well populated, internet commerce sites that should be fortresses of security.
Its funny, because one of the sites mentioned was PayPal. My wife set up an account on PayPal then couldn't remember the password 6 months later when she wanted to use it again. It was my credit card and her email address and I spent an hour on the phone trying to get the password reset and couldn't get it accomplished. After three years the account expired and we were able to get signed up again. I guess I just don't have the skills required.
The article explains really well what hacking really is about. And this 15 year old seems to be really good at the social engineering aspect of gathering info.
Next paragraph:
And it isn't just weak security procedures. If people are able to be conned into divulging information, there is no security. I'm thinking of other articles I've read where the hacker calls the front desk of ABC Corp and says to the receptionist. "Hey... this is Bob down in IT... I have an emergency and I need your login information right away."
You are correct, the scariest aspect of this article is how easy it was for these children to acquire the info needed to break into accounts in high profile, well populated, internet commerce sites that should be fortresses of security.
Its funny, because one of the sites mentioned was PayPal. My wife set up an account on PayPal then couldn't remember the password 6 months later when she wanted to use it again. It was my credit card and her email address and I spent an hour on the phone trying to get the password reset and couldn't get it accomplished. After three years the account expired and we were able to get signed up again. I guess I just don't have the skills required.