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United Kingdom Security The Internet

UK Homes Lose Internet Access After Cyber-Attack (theguardian.com) 33

More than 100,000 people in the UK have had their internet access cut after a string of service providers were hit by what is believed to be a coordinated cyber-attack, taking the number affected in Europe up to about a million. From a report on The Guardian, shared by reader JoshTops: TalkTalk, one of Britain's biggest service providers, the Post Office and the Hull-based KCom were all affected by the malware known as the Mirai worm, which is spread via compromised computers. The Post Office said 100,000 customers had experienced problems since the attack began on Sunday and KCom put its figure at about 10,000 customers since Saturday. Earlier this week, Germany's Deutsche Telekom said up to 900,000 of its customers had lost their internet connection as part of the same incident.
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UK Homes Lose Internet Access After Cyber-Attack

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  • Oh no (Score:5, Funny)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Friday December 02, 2016 @11:22AM (#53408551) Homepage Journal
    In related news, productivity of workers in the UK was up 455% today.
  • by DumbSwede ( 521261 ) <slashdotbin@hotmail.com> on Friday December 02, 2016 @11:46AM (#53408705) Homepage Journal

    Get use to the new normal. It may get harder and harder to use the internet as bad actors (whether criminal or State) adopt AI to compromise systems. Of course we will use AI to protect systems, but this is probably an asymmetrical fight. What use are captchas or security questions if a basic enough AI can pose as a human and has enough background information to draw from? I don’t know whether the coming AI proxy wars will speed AI development, or slow it down as the internet grinds to a halt.

    • AI? You are funny. We can barely get basic software to work right.
    • Routers issued by Telekom are crap, hence easy to attack. The attack wasn't as sophisticated as it sounds. But it is also a lack of consumer awareness of cyber security that leads to a lot of attacks being successful.
      • ... consumer awareness ...

        That's like saying consumers should be up on current events by intuition, with no need for news sites.

        All this shit is computers. Computers should be hardened against this simple crap.

        The answer is to prevent this from happening in the first place.

        I'd suggest a botnet scanner that gives a heads up about open doors and the presence of malware signatures.

        Manufacturers should force password change, or halt installation.

        I like the equipment that ships with random username/password on the bottom that can't be ch

    • by Zocalo ( 252965 )
      What's new about it? This is the same FUBAR cluelessness we should be used by now from large consumer ISPs like TalkTalk (who also run the Post Office ISP network), although I thought KCom knew better - maybe they've lost the cluefullness they had when they first set up and were at the cutting edge of high-speed broadband. The only reason this was a problem for them was because they thought it was a good idea to provide their customers with routers with the remote admin ports active and exposed to the Int
  • by tlambert ( 566799 ) on Friday December 02, 2016 @12:34PM (#53409071)

    It's a cyberattack on the UK ... by the UK.

    The computers in question were obviously part of the Avalanche Botnet.

    https://it.slashdot.org/story/... [slashdot.org]

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