• Critical Vulnerability and Privacy LoopHole Found in RoboForm Password Manager

    Unless you are a human supercomputer, remembering password is not so easy, and that too if you have a different password for each site. But luckily...
  • miniLock - Open Source File Encryption Tool from CryptoCat Developer

    It’s the age of surveillance what made the Use of Encryption so widely that it has become a need of law enforcement agencies, cyber criminals as...
  • A BEGINNERS GUIDE TO HACKING UNIX

      *************  *       A BEGINNERS GUIDE TO:        *  *        ...
  • CASH! CASH! Hacking ATM Machines with Just a Text Message

    As we reported earlier, Microsoft will stop supporting the Windows XP operating system after 8th April, apparently 95% of the world’s 3 million...
  • Microsoft Word Zero-Day Vulnerability is being exploited in the Wild

    Microsoft warned about a zero-day vulnerability in Microsoft Word that is being actively exploited in targeted attacks and discovered by the...
  • Snoopy Drone Can Hack Your Smartphones

    The use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVS) called Drones is rapidly transforming the way we go to war. Drones were once used for...
  • Android Privilege Escalation Flaws leave Billions of Devices vulnerable to Malware Infection

    Android - a widely used Smartphone platform offered by Google is once again suspected to affect its users with malicious software that puts...
  • Introduction to Netcat

    Introduction : So I was messing around on the internet and came across a tool called Netcat.  I've been messing with it for a couple of...
  • Google Nexus phone vulnerable to SMS-based DOS attack

    Google’s Nexus Smartphones are vulnerable to SMS-based DOS attack, where an attacker can force it to restart, freeze, or lose network...
  • Linux worm targeting Routers, Set-top boxes and Security Cameras with PHP-CGI Vulnerability

    A Symantec researcher has discovered a new Linux worm, targeting machine-to-machine devices, and exploits a PHP vulnerability...

Sunday, 29 September 2013

16-Year-Old Teenager arrested for World's biggest cyber attack ever

16-Year-Old Teenager has been arrested over his alleged involvement in the World's biggest largest DDoS attacks against the Dutch anti-spam group Spamhaus.

The teenager, whose name is unknown at this point, was arrested by British police in April, but details of his arrest were just leaked to the British press on Thursday.

He was taken into custody when police swooped on his south-west London home after investigations identified significant sums of money were flowing through his bank account. The suspect was found with his computer systems open and logged on to various virtual systems and forums.

The March 20 attack on Spamhaus has been dubbed as the “biggest cyber attack in the history of the Internet” which saw server of the Dutch anti-spam organization being bombarded with traffic in tune of 300 billion bits per second (300Gbps).



A DDoS attack takes place when hackers use an army of infected computers to send traffic to a server, causing a shutdown in the process.

It's unclear what role the teenager played in the massive distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack. The boy has been released on bail until later this year. A 35-year-old Dutchman was detained and his computers, data carriers and mobile phones were seized, local media speculates that the person is none other than CyberBunker spokesman Sven Olaf Kamphuis.

The attack on Spamhaus is believed to have started after the anti-spam organization blacklisted CyberBunker for allegedly spreading spam.

No comments:

Post a Comment