DDoSia Powers Affiliate-Driven Hacktivist Attacks
Pro-Russian group NoName057(16) uses a custom denial-of-service tool to mobilize volunteers and disrupt government, media, and institutional sites tied to Ukraine and the West.
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Background for this topic.
Denial of service (DoS) is an attack that makes a system, network, or application unavailable by exhausting resources or triggering failure. Floods can consume bandwidth, connection state, CPU, memory, or request-processing capacity; a software defect may instead be exploited to crash a service. A distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack generates traffic from many systems, increasing volume and complicating source-based blocking. The material security impact is loss of availability for users and dependent services, including websites, APIs, DNS, and operational systems.
Mitigation should match the bottleneck. Rate limits, request validation, connection protections, caching, and service isolation can reduce application and state-exhaustion attacks; volumetric traffic generally needs filtering or absorption upstream of the network. Monitoring should distinguish abnormal request patterns from ordinary load and alert on saturation, while tested failover, traffic diversion, and restoration procedures limit outage duration. Vulnerability management and timely patching reduce DoS caused by remotely triggerable crashes, but do not replace capacity planning and resilience testing.
Pro-Russian group NoName057(16) uses a custom denial-of-service tool to mobilize volunteers and disrupt government, media, and institutional sites tied to Ukraine and the West.
Long after CVEs issued and open source flaws fixed Last fall, Jakub Ciolek reported two denial-of-service bugs in Argo CD, a popular Kubernetes controller, via HackerOne's Internet Bug Bounty (IBB) program. Both were assigned CVEs and have since been fixed. But instead of receiving an $8,500 reward for the two flaws, Ciolek says, HackerOne ghosted him for months.…
The botnet known as Kimwolf has infected more than 2 million Android devices by tunneling through residential proxy networks, according to findings from Synthient