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Wikipedia Security The Internet

Parts of Wikipedia Went Offline After 'Malicious' DDoS Attack (www.rte.ie) 47

An anonymous reader quotes the website of Ireland's national public service broadcasting: Popular online reference website Wikipedia went down in several countries after the website was targeted by what it described as a "malicious attack". The server of the Wikimedia Foundation, which hosts the site, suffered a "massive" Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack, the organisation's German account said in a tweet last night.

In a separate statement the Wikimedia Foundation said that the attack on the encyclopedia - one of the world's most popular websites - was "ongoing" and teams were working to restore access... Wikimedia condemned the breach of its server, saying it threatened "everyone's fundamental rights to freely access and share information."

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Parts of Wikipedia Went Offline After 'Malicious' DDoS Attack

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  • We know it was malicious, because it was carried out via packets, and not oral sex.

  • and share information."

    Yeah that's what the mods are for.

    • Everyone's fundamental right to remove useful lists because they're not more noteworthy than the demographics of Jerome, Arizona.

  • 'malicious'? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Saturday September 07, 2019 @11:00AM (#59168772)
    Why is malicious in quotes? Every DDOS attack, by it's very definition, is malicious.
    • by Spasmodeus ( 940657 ) on Saturday September 07, 2019 @11:12AM (#59168796)

      Hey guys! Just thought I'd send a friendly DDoS your way to let you know I've been thinking of you! Hugs and kisses!

    • Every DDOS attack, by it's very definition, is malicious.

      I dunno. I could imagine governments would perform DDOS attacks against kiddie porn, pro democracy and communist propaganda sites, and then justify it by saying stuff like:

      "Stink of the children!"

      "Democracy will undermine our stable social systems!"

      "Socialist thoughts are enslaving thought crimes!"

      It's kinda sorta like: "One man's malicious is another man's benign".

      • by vbdasc ( 146051 )

        Without any sarcasm, what is a nation state to do, when a website disobeys and disrespects a lawful order from a court, for example, only because its servers are in another country? Right, perform a lawful DDoS.

    • Re:'malicious'? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Some Guy I Dont Know ( 6200212 ) on Saturday September 07, 2019 @11:28AM (#59168844)

      The "slashdot effect", back when it was a thing, was a DDOS.
      But it wasn't malicious - it was just a bunch of people accidentally overloading the servers and preventing anyone from being served.

      • You were SO close. The Slashdot effect was indeed not malicious, however it was not an attack either. That's actually WHY it is called the Slashdot effect rather than the Slashdot attack.
      • The key word in there is the second d. Nobody was denying anybody access, just the server didn't have the resources to provide access.

    • Re:'malicious'? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Antique Geekmeister ( 740220 ) on Saturday September 07, 2019 @01:40PM (#59169066)

      There have been some accidental DDOS attacks, typically when software designers made foolish assumptions about how connection testing should work.

  • Why?
    • by fazig ( 2909523 )
      Some immediate hypotheses on Twitter and other social media were that someone was testing their capabilities before they make a move on their real target.
  • From angry companies furious that they deleted them as not notable, to scientists who didn't even have an article after winning a Nobel prize. Wikipedia also begs for money more than any other major charity. I expect Wikipedia will become a modern day library of Alexandria, where people fatigue of giving them money but not getting articles in return. There are also a lot of persistent banned users on Wikipedia, who find security flaws in the MediaWiki software to vandalize. I think ultimately either the Wik
  • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Saturday September 07, 2019 @11:19AM (#59168822)
    that is political extremists, or religious extremists, you can bet it is one or the other
    • Or an article 'curator' was tossed after undoing every single edit to 'their' article.
    • by Empiric ( 675968 )

      Extremists, perhaps, but since 1522 we've had the "open sourcing" of religion by the publication of the Luther bible and the fortuitous invention of the Gutenberg press.

      Freely available, mass distributed theological content resulted in the Protestant Reformation. The vast majority of those, though to today, have no issue with free information.

    • Right, it’s not as if any group has ever done such a thing just for the lulz...

    • Oh? Access to quite personal information is constantly abused for spam, for stalking, and for fraud. It's also used to rip off copyright owners who legally seek compensation for their unpublished work, or for work they do publish and legally expect reasonable compensation for.

      Let's not get involved in the "information wants to be free!" political bandwagon, and mistake freedom to publish with freedom to steal copies, shall we?

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • If Jimmy Wales to protect "everyone's fundamental rights to freely access and share information", encourage more forks of Wikipedia. Or, replicate to other hosting providers.

    This response by someone who has made millions from other people's work, sounds disturbingly like a bad politician who wraps himself in a flag to deflect criticism and credit himself with the contributions of common citizens.

    I suggest less platitudes, more practical solutions, even if it reduces profitability.

    • by rednip ( 186217 )
      Yea, if they had any respect for freedom of information they have instructions on Forking Wikipedia [wikipedia.org], oh wait.
      • by Empiric ( 675968 )

        Yes, but there's a distinction between what one is obliged to do (legally or as a practical public perception issue), and what one -can- do.

        If the goal is optimizing free availability, more can be done than not disallowing what they can't disallow anyway.

        In any case, the editors are more of a problem to distribution of "free information". Nothing reverted without valid rationale is "free".

        • by rednip ( 186217 )

          So, what's the 'distinction' you vaguely reference? How would you do 'optimizing free availability? What is 'disallowed' by 'disallowing'? In any case, it now seems that you also vaguely want to blame those evil 'editors'. The 'reverts' seems to be your actual problem, let me guess: political entries you tried to 'correct'?

          Sure Wikipedia ain't perfect and I have seen legitimate complaints to which I agree, but as I see it overall it's likely the best source of information mankind has ever known. I giv

          • by Empiric ( 675968 )

            Well, you'd be wrong on the political reverts.

            And I have not criticized the -content- of Wikipedia, that is truly impressive, it's just that it wasn't provided by Wikipedia--it was provided by the altruistic contributions of people in the wider society.

            Similarly to Apple swallowing up thousands... perhaps millions of hours of altruistic and highly skilled work of BSD coders, to slap the label "iOS" on it and make billions and then play tax games to keep from contributing profits back to their home country,

    • You can download the whole thing from a torrent if you want. https://meta.wikimedia.org/wik... [wikimedia.org]

  • Wikimedia condemned the breach of its server, saying it threatened "everyone's fundamental rights to freely access and share information."

    I'm confused, are DDoS attacks consider "breaches" now? Maybe it's just me, but to me a breach has always means someone gained some kind of unprivileged access - they "breached" the security.

I tell them to turn to the study of mathematics, for it is only there that they might escape the lusts of the flesh. -- Thomas Mann, "The Magic Mountain"

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