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Possible cyberattack against US internet infrastructure

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If I have to choose between this and nuclear war, I choose nuclear war.


This made me chuckle. How much do we depend on an always on internet?

Sadly I immediately feel "uncomforatable" when denied psn/time warner cable/Netflix for over 30 minutes. And this mild anxiety grows the longer my normal services are down.

Sign of our times I suppose. Time to go to the beach.
 
Huh so this is the nature of modern warfare now? Why risk a traditional war when you can undermine and hurt your rivals from the comfort of your home? I wonder if this was just a test,a prelude to a more critical attack on core American infrastructure, i am interested in knowing how much potential damage can be dealt.

Aren't most SCADA systems online now? If so you could kill thousands if not tens of thousands if you time the attack right
 
2016-10-21_1115dfz43.png

Uh-oh!
 
I remember losing electricity for a whole week maybe ten years ago. It was highly annoying, but I won't lie, it was fun in its own way. Wouldn't wish for it again though. :p

On Bill Clinton's inauguration, Seattle had one of the largest wind storm in the city's history. During it, a tree fell on our house and we were without power for over a week. I feel bad for my mom who had to supply me with batteries for my game gear. What a nightmare.

Does this cause damage that engineers have to go in and repair or does everything go back to normal when the attack stops?

I doubt there's any physical damage but there's no doubt tons of engineers running around a data center right now.
 
Twitter is dead for me.

Isn't there a site that shows you where attacks come from?

Couldn't Dyn just block a whole country in the case? Or does the act of the server denying cause this?
 
I remember losing electricity for a whole week maybe ten years ago. It was highly annoying, but I won't lie, it was fun in its own way. Wouldn't wish for it again though. :p

The great blackout. I remember that well. My power was back the next morning.

We lost power for 5 days a few years ago, an ice storm took out much of the city's power lines, but my phone still had 3G. :P
 
It's a pretty open secret that state run botnets are getting the capabilities to take out enough of the Internet to render it mostly useless. We are just seeing the beginning of this.
 
Aren't most SCADA systems online now? If so you could kill thousands if not tens of thousands if you time the attack right

Woah that SCADA system seems to be used everywhere, welp. Well i'm sure they are well secured, right?

What is SCADA Used For?

SCADA (Supervisory control and data acquisition) is an industrial automation control system at the core of many modern industries, including:

Energy
Food and beverage
Manufacturing
Oil and gas
Power
Recycling
Transportation
Water and waste water
And many more


SCADA systems are used by private companies and public-sector service providers. SCADA works well in many different types of enterprises because they can range from simple configurations to large, complex projects.

Virtually anywhere you look in today's world, there is some type of SCADA system running behind the scenes, whether at your local supermarket, refinery, waste water treatment plant, or even your own home.

https://inductiveautomation.com/what-is-scada
 
This whole thing is nuts. I remember reading people were trying to use the Internet of Things devices (like a web-ready camera) in a botnet to DDoS. Crazy shit, man.
 
Twitter is dead for me.

Isn't there a site that shows you where attacks come from?

Couldn't Dyn just block a whole country in the case? Or does the act of the server denying cause this?

I'd be amazed if they DIDN'T know where the attacks were coming from. Though its kind of hard to outright block a country from accessing the internet. You would have to basically cut all the wires going in or out, or at least limit them to the point where their own bandwidth collapses upon itself.

Other than that, the act of denying service is the job of the software. All a server sees is an electrical signal coming in, its up to the OS to inspect that and then determine "Yes" or "No" based on the rules you setup.

Even if you were to block the country altogether, that country is still pinging the servers and using up server-time before it gets to the point where it returns an error
 
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