Re: Status as of Friday, June 30, 2017
Posted: Sat Jul 01, 2017 7:04 am
I am OK with the a fee increase, also thanks for your persistence in dealing with the attacks.
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They did notice and mitigate it, but the action they took was incorrect. They blocked all UDP traffic.piet wrote:I would say drop javapipe, what kind of ddos provider doesn`t notice (and migate) a 10gb flood ? why are protocols / ports open that arn`t needed ? Why does it take so long for them to respond ?
What if a ddos is happening while you are asleep ? who is gonna call comcast ?
now that you know it`s "only" 2900, would you still increase the fee with 2% ?
LOL This is EXACTLY why DDoS's work as smokeskreens, because you'd expect nothing else could possibly be happening.Steve Sokolowski wrote:While this sounds intriguing, if there were other traffic going to the servers, they were unsuccessful in exploiting them. There was so much attack traffic that Chris couldn't even log in, so I doubt attackers would have been able to do any damage considering that Chris couldn't even get characters from an SSH terminal to display.Mrrt wrote:I would be less interested in additional DDoS mitigation solutions at this point as I would be in having more information about my network traffic.
DDoS attacks are commonly used as smokescreens to divert attention while real info-gathering/hacks are taking place, so I'd be more interested in seeing what other abnormal traffic may be headed to the servers to either identify or rule out more serious potential security threats.
An even simpler explanation is that some Russian hacker decided to spend money to buy 21Gbps of attack traffic to cause trouble.GregoryGHarding wrote:OR.. it could just have been a DDoS to try and run prohashing out of business as a competitor... the simplest explanation is most likely the correct one
Take a read through the last page or so. Steve has corrected misinterpretation of pricing structure of Comcast. But I still think javapipe is the best to stick with until we outgrow or they can no longer mitigateEyedol-X wrote:I say for now follow KISS (keep it simple stupid) and stick with Javapipe.
This entire Ddos attack could be some rager pool that is trying to steal hashrate from you or some altcoin that has a user that doesn't like the difficulty spike when PH connects miners to the network.
That being said, this could go away in time once they "start getting headaches and lose interest" so to speak.
I do think you have the right-headed approach towards having comcast as a backup. Does this service require an upfront agreement with monthly fees or is it $1095 a-la-carte?
I've thought this myself, more likely "users" though, a group, site or something that has been making money off altcoins and feels PH pushes up the diffsome altcoin that has a user that doesn't like the difficulty spike when PH connects miners to the network