DDoS-for-Hire Websites are Seized by Authorities

 

According to Europol, international police deactivated roughly 50 well-known websites that charged users to perform distributed denial-of-service attacks and detained seven people who were allegedly the sites’ administrators.
Operation Power Off was a coordinated effort by law enforcement agencies in the US, the Uk, the Netherlands, Poland, and Germany to combat attacks that have the potential to shut down the internet.
According to the police, the defendants misrepresented their websites as being services that could be employed for network testing while actually charging users for DDoS assaults against universities, government organizations, gaming platforms, and millions of people both domestically and overseas. Websites are rendered unavailable by DDoS attacks, which function by flooding them with unwanted traffic.
“These DDoS-for-hire websites, with paying customers both inside and outside the US, enabled network outages on a massive scale, targeting millions of victim computers around the world,” said Antony Jung, special agent in charge of the operation at the FBI’s field office in Anchorage, Alaska. Before purchasing or offering these illicit services, prospective users and administrators should exercise caution.
The largest DDoS-for-hire services are available on these sites, according to the UK’s National Crime Agenc

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