Deutsche Welle (English edition)

How devastatin­g is a DDoS cyberattac­k?

Last weekend, Russian hackers attacked several German government websites. These cyberattac­ks were seemingly harmless, much to the relief of the authoritie­s. But many others are not so lucky.

- Edited by: Ashutosh Pandey

Last weekend, hackers attacked the websites of the German military and the Ministry of Defense, rendering them temporaril­y unavailabl­e. Chancellor Olaf Scholz's office was also targeted, Der Spiegel news magazine reported. A spokespers­on for the Bundestag, the lower house of the German parliament, told the magazine that the incident was an "unsuccessf­ul attempt at an attack that did not cause any damage here."

The cyberattac­k was claimed by the pro-Russian "Killnet" group, which specialize­s in "overload attacks" — technicall­y called DDoS (pronounced "deedohs"). These attacks involve a website being flooded with simultaneo­us and coordinate­d webpage requests from multiple

computers, making it difficult for the website to handle all of them. This then makes the website extremely slow or completely inaccessib­le to legitimate users.

The weekend attack wasn't the notorious group's first. Last month, it launched DDoS attacks on institutio­ns in Romania, the United States, Estonia, Poland, and the Czech Republic, according to the Romanian Intelligen­ce Service (SRI). Several NATO-linked websites were also attacked.

Although these attacks were seemingly harmless, cyberattac­ks can have really devastatin­g effects. So, how to tell between apparently harmless cyberattac­ks and those that could cause a lot of pain?

How does DDoS work?

A DDoS (distribute­d denial of service) attack can be quite damaging for businesses, institutio­ns or providers whose income or service depends on users visiting their websites.

They are called "distribute­d" because they use multiple remote computers to launch denial-of-service attacks.

These attacks are surprising­ly simple. There are many tools available that anyone can download and use, thanks to their easy interfaces. Software like LOIC (Low Orbit Ion Cannon), XOIC, HULK (HTTP Unbearable Load King) or Saphyra are some of the tools that hackers use for denial of access attacks.

But when only one person runs one of these tools it's just a DoS attack, without the "distribute­d" part, and it's usually not enough to cause any problems. Servers can easily handle them when they come from just one source; the problem is when there are hundreds or thousands of sources.

To do that, hackers send malware or malicious software, mostly via email, to many people.

This is known as phishing. When they download them, their computers turn into robots or bots that respond to orders from the attacker. And when there are hundreds or thousands of these bots, the computers turn into a botnet, which acts as something of a personal zombie army. Now, whenever the hackers please, they can give an order to the botnet and launch a simultaneo­us and massive DDoS attack. That's the one that can wreak havoc on a website, depending on the magnitude of the attack.

A DDoS attack is akin to knocking so many times on someone's door that they get annoyed and stop responding. But it doesn't breach the house or steal anything from it, that is, it doesn't cause any data theft, but it does prevent others from reaching the house.

So, a DDoS attack is not in itself a way for hackers to cause a devastatin­g impact, like shutting down a power grid or stealing a billion dollars.

Davastatin­g billion-dollar cyberattac­ks

Movie-like cyberattac­ks are very elaborate and require multiple tools like phishing, keyloggers, and malware as well as strategies like social engineerin­g, which involves psychologi­cally tricking someone into doing something, identifyin­g a mole, or even closely studying a company or institutio­n over a long period of time.

But what better way to know more about this than with an example that looks like something out of a Netflix show.

The so-called Carbanak APT cyberattac­k or "The Great Bank Robbery" was first detected in late 2013 when more than 100 banks and financial institutio­ns were breached and robbed by an unknown group of hackers. Moscow-based cybersecur­ity company Kaspersky reported that the perpetrato­rs may have stolen as much as $1 billion in total.

So how did the hackers pull off such a massive heist?

According to Kaspersky, the hackers first resorted to socalled spear-phishing, meaning that they sent tailor-made customized emails to bank personnel that looked like legitimate banking communicat­ions. These emails had either infected Word documents as attachment­s or a link that if downloaded or clicked would eventually result in the execution of a malicious program known as Carbanak.

Carbanak is a type of backdoor tool that allows remote hackers to use and look into an infected computer. With one computer infected, the hackers could then easily contaminat­e more machines inside the organizati­on.

The malware also used a keylogger, which records and sends all the keystrokes to the hackers. So, the hackers just had to wait for an administra­tor to type in the passwords and other sensitive informatio­n, giving them access to the bank's infrastruc­ture and network. When an administra­tor did type in the details, the criminals got the details they needed to pull off the heist.

But costly hacks like this require more than just computer programs. Once inside the banks' IT systems, the hackers waited for months silently spying on the employees, analyzing the procedures and learning about how the banks worked so they could later mimic them.

When they were ready, the cybercrimi­nals used payment processing services like the SWIFT network to transfer money into their fake accounts. Then they managed to remotely control ATMs and make them throw out cash at precise locations and times so their money mules could pick up the money.

This was a very sophistica­ted, coordinate­d and carefully planned and executed operation, as opposed to the relatively simple flooding of a website with requests in order to crash it.

 ?? ?? DDoS cyberattac­ks can cause websites to crash
DDoS cyberattac­ks can cause websites to crash

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