Tomorrow, the world will end
No, this isn't about the Mayan calendar, and that particular instance of "End of the World" is anyway not scheduled to happen until December 21st.
This is about March 31st, and the announcement by "Anonymous", or those who claim to be "Anonymous", to wipe out the DNS root servers with a Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack on March 31. Cricket Liu, the author of most of the O'Reilly DNS books and an authority on the subject, has posted a good blog entry at http://www.cricketondns.com/post.cfm/could-a-ddos-attack-against-the-roots-succeed, explaining in-depth that while such an attack is theoretically feasible, it is unlikely to succeed at a large scale.
We'll have to see. If DNS stops working tomorrow, we at least only have to live without it until December 21st, when the world will end for good anyway :).
Comments
John
Mar 30th 2012
1 decade ago
Prolly should start on the greenhouse first...
If the world ends, let me know.
Sean
Mar 30th 2012
1 decade ago
Graham
Mar 30th 2012
1 decade ago
WilliamB
Mar 30th 2012
1 decade ago
Anyway, during the show, one of the speakers said that George Bush Snr announced that the war on Iraq would start at 5pm. In response world's press said “5pm, but 5pm where?"
pallelli
Mar 30th 2012
1 decade ago
http://pastebin.com/NKbnh8q8
In the above pastebin-post, the following is stated:
"download link in #opGlobalBlackout"
If you entered the Anonymous IRC-network at the time this was posted, the topic of channel opGlobalBlackout was: Official Press Release: http://pastebin.com/yK79Tsgq
As you can see, the "Press Release" tells potential Anonymous-members to stop waging war, that peace is the way to go, to stop DDoS-attacks. This is another words an "anti-op" designed to get potential anonymous-recruits to think about what they are doing.
There never was an operation. There was only an anti-operation, designed to get people to think.
Rogers
Apr 1st 2012
1 decade ago
* spoofed UDP-packets with identical "source" and "target" IP-addresses (namely of the targeted DNS-server) would probably be blocked by anti-spoofing rules on the Access Control List of the router between the DNS-server and the rest of the Internet.
* the programming of the DNS-server software would drop any outgoing UDP-packets with a "target" IP-address of itself.
Think "defensive" programming for any DNS-server that is "robust" enough to make the "Top 13" trusted servers, and sleep well at night.
Melvin
Apr 3rd 2012
1 decade ago