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Denial of Service


{LANG_NAVORIGIN} Exploits Denial of Service



Defense Against the DoS/DDoS Attacks on Cisco Routers
DoS/DDos attacks have recently had a huge impact on some of the worlds largest websites. Hang Chau describes this type of attack in detail and outlines ways to prevent them using Cisco routers.
Hang Chau, 09/17/2004


Denial of Service FAQ Basic
This information text is for network administrators who know little about Denial of Service, this text covers all the basic information on Denial of Service attacks and related information. Denial of Service attacks are becoming more and more common on the internet, it does not take a sophisticated hacker to set up and launch a denial of service attack, rather the most common attacker is a young script kiddie, they can accomplish a lot just by using tools downloadable on the internet.
Chris Morganti, 12/16/2004


D-WARD, DDoS and Three Network Administrative Domains
In this paper, I will take an overview for the three administrative domains; compare and analyze the potential abilities of the systems for detecting and defensing the DDoS attacks, when the systems are deployed on each kind of the administrative network domain.
Hang Chau, 10/27/2004


Denial of Service (DOS) Attacks
During the release of a new software product specialized to track spam, ACME Software Inc noticed that there was not as much traffic as they hoped to receive. During further investigation, they found that they could not view their own website. At that moment, the VP of sales received a call from the company's broker stating that ACME Software Inc stock fell 4 point due to lack of confidence. Several states away, spammers didn't like the idea of lower profit margins do to an easy to install spam blocking software so they thought they would fight back. Earlier that day, they took control of hundreds of compromised computers and used them as DoS zombies to attack ACME Software Inc's Internet servers in a vicious act of cyber assault. During an emergency press conference the next morning, ACME Software Inc's CIO announced his resignation as a result of a several million dollar corporate loss.
Jeremy Martin, 09/29/2004


Network Security - Defense Against DoS/DDoS Attacks
DoS/DDoS attacks are virulent types of Internet attacks, which have caused some of the biggest web sites on the world, such as Yahoo, eBay, Amazon to became inaccessible to customers, partners, and users, sometimes for up to twenty-four hours; the financial losses are very huge
Hang Chau, 09/22/2004


DoS Attacks
Covers the concept of Denial of Service attacks and Distributed Denial of Service attacks, including a technical overview of the most common type of DoS attacks such as TCP SYN, UDP flooding, and Smurfing.
By Johan Hiemstra, 07/28/2004


A Summary of DoS/DDoS Prevention, Monitoring and Mitigation Techniques in a Service Provider Environment
The frequency and sophistication of Denial of Service (DoS) and Distributed Denial of Service attacks (DDoS) on the Internet are rapidly increasing. Service providers are under mounting pressure to prevent, monitor and mitigate DoS/DDoS attacks directed toward their customers and their infrastructure. The Internet is part of the critical national infrastructure but is unique in that it has no customary borders to safeguard it from attacks. Attacks that are seen everyday on the Internet include direct attacks, remote controlled attacks, reflective attacks, worms, and viruses. Specific attacks directed at a service provider's infrastructure can be very damaging and cause widespread outages. This paper covers these attacks and discusses techniques to prevent attacks including good security policies, new/updated product security testing, patch management, spoofed packet dropping (uRPF) and firewall/IDS/IPS deployment in a service provider environment.
By Michael Glenn, 04/15/2004


Denial of Service attacks and the emergence of "Intrusion Prevention Systems"
Firewalls and Intrusion Detection Systems (IDS) have been the mainstay of network security perimeters for many years and have evolved over time with increasing sophistication and technological advance to maintain protection of Enterprise Networks. These systems however are bearing the brunt of increased Denial of Service (DoS) and Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks from across the globe[1,2]. Where possible new techniques and technologies should always be considered to provide additional defenses to prevent these devices and the Enterprise Network itself from becoming overwhelmed during such attacks. The objective of this paper is to give a review of DoS / DDoS attacks, provide a list of basic network attack prevention techniques, provide a brief comparison of current and emerging Intrusion Prevention devices available and to give an example implementation scenario using one of these products.
By Adrian Brindley, 04/05/2004


Closing the Floodgates: DDoS Mitigation Techniques
To be on the receiving end of a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack is a nightmare scenario for any network administrator, security specialist or access provider. It begins instantly, without warning, and continues relentlessly: machines down, jammed bandwidth, overloaded routers. An effective, immediate response is often difficult and may depend on third parties, such as ISPs. With these challenges in mind, this article will explore some techniques that systems administrators and security professionals can employ should they ever find themselves in this rather undesirable situation.
By Matthew Tanase, 03/24/2004


Consensus Roadmap for Defeating Distributed Denial of Service Attacks
The distributed denial of service attacks during the week of February 7 highlighted security weaknesses in hosts and software used in the Internet that put electronic commerce at risk. These attacks also illuminated several recent trends and served as a warning for the kinds of high-impact attacks that we may see in the near future. This document outlines key trends and other factors that have exacerbated these Internet security problems, summarizes near-term activities that can be taken to help reduce the threat, and suggests research and development directions that will be required to manage the emerging risks and keep them within more tolerable bounds. For the problems described, activities are listed for user organizations, Internet service providers, network manufacturers, and system software providers.
By Rich Pethia, Alan Paller, and Gene Spafford, 03/24/2004


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