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Taming the 800 Pound Gorilla

Jakub CzyzUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USAMichalis KallitsisMerit Network, Inc., Ann Arbor, MI, USAManaf GharaibehColorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USAChristos PapadopoulosColorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USAMichael BaileyUniversity of Michigan and University of Illinois, Ann Arbor, Champaign, MI, USAManish KarirMerit Network, Inc., Ann Arbor, MI, USA
2014en
ABI

Аннотация

Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks based on Network Time Protocol (NTP) amplification, which became prominent in December 2013, have received significant global attention. We chronicle how this attack rapidly rose from obscurity to become the dominant large DDoS vector. Via the lens of five distinct datasets, we characterize the advent and evolution of these attacks. Through a dataset that measures a large fraction of global Internet traffic, we show a three order of magnitude rise in NTP. Using a large darknet, we observe a similar rise in global scanning activity, both malicious and research. We then dissect an active probing dataset, which reveals that the pool of amplifiers totaled 2.2M unique IPs and includes a small number of "mega amplifiers," servers that replied to a single tiny probe packet with gigabytes of data. This dataset also allows us, for the first time, to analyze global DDoS attack victims (including ports attacked) and incidents, where we show 437K unique IPs targeted with at least 3 trillion packets, totaling more than a petabyte. Finally, ISP datasets shed light on the local impact of these attacks. In aggregate, we show the magnitude of this major Internet threat, the community's response, and the effect of that response.

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