Posted on 09/14/2016 9:55:02 AM PDT by amorphous
The pillars that provide the basic infrastructure of the internet are being probed by an unknown entity that is probing for that point where the foundation cracks and the internet breaks.
The internets critical and underlying basic infrastructure is being probed by an unknown attacker who is patiently looking for vulnerabilities, revealed cybersecurity expert and cryptographer Bruce Schneier.
A board member at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the Tor project, Schneier is also the chief technology officer at Resilient, a cybersecurity firm recently acquired by IBM.
In a blog post, Schneier states that some of the companies that run critical pieces of the internet are being probed by an unknown quantity, with precisely calibrated attacks.,
Much like raptors did fences on Isla Nublar, these attacks are systematic and well-planned, seeking to understand the defenses employed by these vitally-important companies.
These probes take the form of precisely calibrated attacks designed to determine exactly how well these companies can defend themselves, and what would be required to take them down, Schneier wrote.
He wrote:
One week, the attack would start at a particular level of attack and slowly ramp up before stopping. The next week, it would start at that higher point and continue. And so on, along those lines, as if the attacker were looking for the exact point of failure.
In speculating, its possible that the companies Schneier is referring to include registrars (the companies that provide domains like .com etc.) and DNS providers.
Schneiers findings are in line with a DDoS trends report [PDF] by Verisign, the registrar for domains such as .com and .net. If Verisign is taken down, your favorite websites and even your emails are likely to stop working.
Furthermore, one of the companies even revealed that in addition to DDoS attacks intrusions that attempted to modify and manipulate internet addresses and tunnels, were also discovered. Again, to test the company or its security defenses response times.
Someone is extensively testing the core defensive capabilities of the companies that provide critical Internet services.
No Mischief Here
Schneier looks beyond activists and cybercriminals as the instigators of these systematic and calibrated attacks, pointing instead to the forces of cyberespionage. Such capabilities are, as history shows, possessed by the likes of China, Russia, North Korea and the United States, among others.
He wrote:
It feels like a nations military cybercommand trying to calibrate its weaponry in the case of cyberwar. It reminds me of the USs Cold War program of flying high-altitude planes over the Soviet Union to force their air-defense systems to turn on, to map their capabilities.
If the assertion does come true someday, the world could see an unparalleled blackout that could disrupt the way we live in the present day, to the very core.
And what can we do about it?
Nothing, really, Schneier added.
Nothing until we are aware and talking about it and do some probing of our own to look for that unknown intruder.
And Obunga is doing his best to hand it over to foreign powers and multinationals - in return for some future personal riches, I'm sure.
Wait until management of ICANN is handed over to Zimbabwe.
Frustrating.
If the internet goes, well let’s just say that there are other ways of communicating with out gov’t fingers in it....
Israel, China, Russia.
Obozo is determined to let all the world’s worst governments have influence in the administration of the basic structure and operations of the internet.
That is even more idiotic than allowing the likes of Saudi Arabia, et al. to chair the UN Human Rights Commission.
I wouldn’t feel too bad; I have a Master’s Degree in comp sci and I work in the field for the government, and I feel almost helpless and useless in the fight, too.
LOL.
Thanks for reminding me that “Mr. Robot” is on tonight.
Maybe this is why Netflix kept freezing last night? ;-)
No, that would be because of global warming :-)
We'll have to, American kids are to lazy to write code.
and the wherewithal to defend it.
Yeah, Oturbo is.
Don’t be surprised if the Internet goes down today and Walmart is all out of canned Tuna next week, or your bank is closed, or your local gas station is out of gas, or ...
“Maybe this is why Netflix kept freezing last night? ;-)”
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Worst kind of internet sabotage - ISP throttling your bandwidth!
is streaming done over the Internet??
if the Internet breaks, does that mean I lose Netflix and Internet radio and tablet?
I wonder what percentage of US economic activity is internet dependent now? I’ve read that several retailers’ online sales have exceeded brick and mortar sales already, not to mention exclusively online businesses such as Amazon.
It might be time to change your password on your wireless router.
Yep
If you have an antenna you may still be able to watch Dancing With The Stars.
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