![]() ![]() The truth, as made clear in that Alaskan courtroom Friday-and unsealed by the Justice Department on Wednesday-was even stranger: The brains behind Mirai were a 21-year-old Rutgers college student from suburban New Jersey and his two college-age friends from outside Pittsburgh and New Orleans. Then, on a Friday afternoon in October 2016, the internet slowed or stopped for nearly the entire eastern United States, as the tech company Dyn, a key part of the internet’s backbone, came under a crippling assault.Īs the 2016 US presidential election drew near, fears began to mount that the so-called Mirai botnet might be the work of a nation-state practicing for an attack that would cripple the country as voters went to the polls. It was a hard story to miss last year: In France last September, the telecom provider OVH was hit by a distributed denial-of-service ( DDoS) attack a hundred times larger than most of its kind. What drove them wasn’t anarchist politics or shadowy ties to a nation-state. ![]() The most dramatic cybersecurity story of 2016 came to a quiet conclusion Friday in an Anchorage courtroom, as three young American computer savants pleaded guilty to masterminding an unprecedented botnet-powered by unsecured internet-of-things devices like security cameras and wireless routers-that unleashed sweeping attacks on key internet services around the globe last fall.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |