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March 4, 2004 at 3:53 pm #645823
Anonymous
InactiveI am sure it is.
They are stepping it up, have a lot more capacity.
They have let up on Crypto but are still targeting kahnawake (Microgaming).
I wonder if they are building up to disrupt the entire industry.
March 4, 2004 at 3:59 pm #645824Anonymous
Inactiveplaytech.com is also down
March 5, 2004 at 2:36 pm #645879Anonymous
InactiveSwiss, Casino Las Vegas, Club Dice, back up!
March 6, 2004 at 7:07 pm #645906Anonymous
InactiveWatch your own sites as well. DDos Attacks are not limited to casino programs. They have hit webmaster sites as well..
Think it is also important we let programs know when we are unable to access there sites. They may think everything it fine and it may not be.
Does anyone know if any RTG have been targeted with DDos Attacks?
I know that Odd On, Cryptologic, Microgaming and Playtech have had DDos Attacks. Any other software groups?
March 6, 2004 at 7:46 pm #645907Anonymous
InactiveHey Everyone,
This is the most serious problem to come to our industry so far. As Rhonda stated above we all need to keep a close eye on our websites. Two of my sites have been attacked over the past few weeks as well as Lou’s sites. The attacks as we all know have been extreme this week and know one knows when these attacks will cease.Allan
March 6, 2004 at 7:54 pm #645908Anonymous
GuestI’m wondering if there is any correlation between the recent influx of zip-file carrying emails I and others have been receiving.
Could be that they’re targeting casino website webmaster addresses for these, and if opened, they spread out to addresses in our address books?
I haven’t opened any of theses – I automatically delete them. Since they come from all sorts of domains, it’s impossible to screen them out.
March 6, 2004 at 7:59 pm #645909Anonymous
InactiveThe Ddos attacks have been going on for awhile now. Personally I was hit back in Oct and Nov.. So don’t think it has to do with the emails.
The emails are causing other problems with servers running slower.
March 7, 2004 at 12:19 pm #645924Anonymous
InactiveAll RealTime gaming is ok!:bigsmile:
March 9, 2004 at 3:49 pm #646018Anonymous
InactiveOnline betting sites fight cyberextortion
By Jon Swartz, USA TODAY
Online gambling sites are betting on tighter security after a recent wave of computer attacks from cyberextortionists plunged several into darkness.
Shadowy hackers demand $20,000 to $50,000 for protection from distributed denial-of-service attacks, which flood a Web site with data so that it is overloaded.BetWWTS.com in Antigua was forced to pay $30,000 when hackers shuttered its site and thousands of its customers couldn’t place wagers worth an estimated $5 million, CEO Simon Noble says.
It’s one of the lucky ones. Since the attacks started a few months ago, a handful of smaller operations have gone out of business or abandoned Web sites in favor of phones to avoid the problem.
“These sites rely on transactions with clients every few seconds. You disrupt that, and you’ve got major problems,” says Michael Caselli, editor of Online Casino News. “A bank, by comparison, can shut down its site for an hour or two.”
Now, online gambling operators are bracing for a new batch of threats for college basketball’s March Madness tournament, which starts next week.
Online gambling sites are fertile territory for extortionists. Many of the approximately 2,000 sites are vulnerable to hacking attacks and have little legal recourse because Internet gambling is illegal in the USA, security experts say.
Great Britain’s National Hi-Tech Crime Unit, which is investigating cases with other law-enforcement agencies, says the problem appears to be confined to gaming sites. But some security experts fear it could spread to banking and other industries that are reluctant to report computer breaches.
The FBI had no comment.
International gambling sites raked in $5.7 billion last year, with projections of $11.6 billion in 2006, says Christiansen Capital Advisors, a New York consulting firm that studies the gaming industry.
Gangs of computer crooks allegedly operating out of Eastern Europe have collected protection money from 10% to 15% of the companies they have threatened, says DK Matai, executive chairman of security company MI2G.
Most issue ultimatums in e-mail messages in the days leading to major sporting events, such as the Super Bowl. Often, threats are issued after an attack, demanding that American currency be sent to a Western Union office.
BoDog Sportsbook & Casino in Costa Rica was forced to pay more than $20,000 last fall when hackers immobilized its site, says Rob Gillespie, the company’s president.
Since then, it has fortified its site with security products from Riverhead Networks and other tech firms. It withstood a hack attack during Super Bowl weekend.
“You want to yell an obscenity at your PC screen when you get an e-mail threat,” Noble says. “These guys are dangerous.”
http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/technology/2004-03-09-cyberextort_x.htm
March 13, 2004 at 1:07 am #646193Anonymous
Guestgood post
April 4, 2004 at 11:03 pm #647464Anonymous
InactiveThese guys killed us for a while. We feel everyones pain. The hardest thing is explaining this to a customer and trying to retain your whole database after an attack.
Dan Ramiro
http://www.Sports-Gambling.comApril 5, 2004 at 12:03 am #647470Anonymous
InactiveI have more sympathy for that now than ever – if that is possible!
This Jeroen Puttemans, the spammer, has been attacking me for several days now and Dean and Ellen even longer.
He isn’t trying to extort money, he just likes annoying people.
We really need some sort of internet police and justice. Criminals flourish with impunity!
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