Sun.Star Pampanga

Internet traffic hijack disrupts Google services

- N internet diversion that rerouted data traf fic through Russia and China disrupted several Google services on Monday, including search and cloud-hosting services.

Service interrupti­ons lasted for nearly two hours and ended about 5:30 p.m. EST., network service companies said. In addition to Russian and Chinese telecommun­ications companies, a Nigerian internet provider was also involved.

Google confirmed Monday’s disruption on a network status page but said only that it believed the cause was ”external to Google .” The company had little additional comment.

The specific method employed, formally known as border gateway protocol hijacking, can knock essential services offline and facilitate espionage and financial theft. Most network traffic to Google services —94 percent as of October 27 — is encrypted, which shields it from prying eyes even if diverted.

Alex Henthorn-Iwane, an executive at the networkint­elligence company ThousandEy­es, called Monday’s incident the worst affecting Google that his company has seen.

He said he suspected nation-state involvemen­t because the traffic was effectivel­y landing at state-run China Telecom. A recent study by U.S. Naval War College and Tel Aviv University scholars says China systematic­ally hijacks and diverts U.S. internet traffic.

Much of the internet’s underpinni­ngs are built on trust, a relic of the good intentions its designers assumed of users. One consequenc­e: little can be done if a nation-state or someone with access to a major internet provider decides to reroute traffic.

Henthorn-Iwane says Monday’s hijacking may have been “a war-game experiment.”

In two recent cases, such rerouting has affected financial sites. In April 2017, one affected Mastercard and Visa among other sites. This past April, another hijacking enabled cryptocurr­ency theft .

The Department of Homeland Security did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

ThousandEy­es named the companies involved in Monday’s incident, in addition to China Telecom, as the Russian internet provider Transtelec­om and the Nigerian ISP MainOne.

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