Cloudflare Blocks a  DDoS Attack with 15 million Requests Per Second

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On Wednesday, Cloudflare, an internet infrastructure company, revealed it has successfully resisted one of the largest volumetric distributed denials of service (DDoS) attacks ever seen. A DDoS attack with a pace of 15.3 million requests per second (rps) was discovered and handled earlier this month, making it one of the greatest HTTPS DDoS attacks ever. 
According to Cloudflare’s Omer Yoachimik and Julien Desgats, “HTTPS DDoS assaults are more pricey of necessary computational resources due to the increased cost of establishing a secure TLS encrypted connection.” “As a result, the attacker pays more to launch the assault, and the victim pays more to mitigate it. Traditional bandwidth DDoS assaults, in which attackers seek to exhaust and jam the victim’s internet connection bandwidth, are different from volumetric DDoS attacks. Instead, attackers concentrate on sending as many spam HTTP requests as possible to a victim’s server to consume valuable server CPU and RAM and prevent legitimate visitors from accessing targeted sites.”
Cloudflare previously announced it mitigated the world’s largest DDoS attack in August 2021, once it countered a 17.2 million HTTP requests per second (rps) attack, which the company described as nearly three times larger than any prior volumetric DDoS attack ever observed in the public domain. As per Cloudflare, the current attack was launched from a botnet including about 6,000 unique infected devices, with Indonesia accounting for 15% of the attack traffic, trailed by Russia, Brazil, In

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