Hackers take axe to Internet root servers
By Rene Millman
Posted on 7 Feb 2007 at 15:07
Three of the world's 13 root DNS servers have come under fire in a distributed denial of service attack that lasted hours. These computers manage the routing of traffic on the Internet, and the offensive was thought to be one of the biggest seen in the last four years.
According to reports, the offensive lasted around 12 hours on Tuesday, although most Internet users didn't notice it. The attack was mounted on DNS servers run by the US Department of Defense, ICANN and UltraDNS, which manages traffic for .org websites.
'There was what appears to be some form of attack during the night hours in California and into the morning,' John Crain, chief technical officer for ICANN told AP. He said that two root servers had suffered badly from the attack but had not crashed while the other saw a lot of heavy traffic. These hardest hit servers were run by ICANN and the DoD.
He said the attack was less serious than in 2002 when all 13 servers came under attack, Crain added the technology used in the servers meant that they distributed loads to other servers around the world, in turn this meant that the underlying infrastructure was better placed to cope with such attacks.
While the reasons behind the attack remain unclear, investigations into the attack have traces the roots of the attack back to South Korea.
The US Department of Homeland Security confirmed that it was monitoring 'anomalous' Internet traffic but there was 'no credible intelligence to suggest an imminent threat to the homeland or our computing systems at this time,' it said in a statement.
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