Article 63X89 The record-setting DDoSes keep coming, with no end in sight

The record-setting DDoSes keep coming, with no end in sight

by
Dan Goodin
from Ars Technica - All content on (#63X89)
data-flood-ddos-800x600.jpeg

Enlarge / Drowning in a sea of data. (credit: Getty Images)

The record-vying distributed denial-of-service attacks keep coming, with two mitigation services reporting they encountered some of the biggest data bombardments ever by threat actors whose tactics and techniques are constantly evolving.

On Monday, Imperva said it defended a customer against an attack that lasted more than four hours and peaked at more than 3.9 million requests per second (RPS).

Record-25.3-Billion-Request-Attack-Image

(credit: Imperva)

In all, the attackers directed 25.3 billion requests at the target with an average rate of 1.8 million RPS. While DDoSes exceeding 1 million RPS are growing increasingly common, they typically come in shorter bursts that measure in seconds or a few minutes at most.

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