what is ddos?
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| what is dos |
A
distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack is one in which a multitude
of compromised systems attack a single target, thereby causing denial
of service for users of the targeted system. The flood of incoming
messages to the target system essentially forces it to shut down,
thereby denying service to the system to legitimate users.
In
a typical DDoS attack, the assailant begins by exploiting a
vulnerability in one computer system and making it the DDoS master. The
attack master, also known as the botmaster, identifies and identifies
and infects other vulnerable systems with malware. Eventually, the
assailant instructs the controlled machines to launch an attack against a
specified target.
There
are two types of DDoS attacks: a network-centric attack which overloads a
service by using up bandwidth and an application-layer attack which
overloads a service or database with application calls. The inundation
of packets to the target causes a denial of service. While the media
tends to focus on the target of a DDoS attack as the victim, in reality
there are many victims in a DDoS attack , the final target and as well
the systems controlled by the intruder. Although the owners of co-opted
computers are typically unaware that their computers have been
compromised, they are nevertheless likely to suffer a degradation of
service and not work well.
A
computer under the control of an intruder is known as a zombie or bot. A
group of co-opted computers is known as a botnet or a zombie army. Both
Kaspersky Labs and Symantec have identified botnets – not spam,
viruses, or worms – as the biggest threat to Internet security.

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