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Internet-Wide Zero-Day Bug Fuels Largest-Ever DDoS Event

Dark Reading
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Published Oct 10, 2023
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Updated

An Internet-wide security vulnerability is at the root of a zero-day attack dubbed "HTTP/2 Rapid Reset," which resulted in a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) flood that was orders of magnitude larger than any previous attack ever recorded. It marks a new chapter in the evolution of DDoS threats, researchers noted. Amazon Web Services, Cloudflare, and Google Cloud each independently observed the attack in question, which featured multiple waves of traffic that lasted for just minutes each. They targeted cloud and Internet infrastructure providers, and the attack took place over Aug. 28–29. Unknown perpetrators are behind the event, but it's clear that they exploited a bug in the HTTP/2 protocol, which is used in about 60% of all Web applications. AWS, Cloudflare, and Google worked with other cloud, DDoS security, and infrastructure vendors in a coordinated effort to minimize any real-world impact of the Rapid Reset attacks, mainly with load balancing and other edge strategies. But that doesn't mean the Internet is protected; plenty of organizations are still susceptible to the attack vector and will need to proactively patch their HTTP/2 instances to be immune to the threat. The pioneering attack vector represents an important evolution of the DDoS landscape, according to Alex Forster, Cloudflare's technical lead over DDoS engineering. "The threat of DDoS attacks is evolving quickly, and are far from a low-level annoyance that they used to be thought of as," he says. "This...

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Affected Software

1 affected component
IETF HTTP/2
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Frequently Asked Questions

1

What is the main topic of this article?

The article discusses a zero-day vulnerability in HTTP/2 that has led to an unprecedented DDoS attack.

2

What security implications are discussed?

The article highlights the potential for widespread disruption and service outages due to the HTTP/2 Rapid Reset vulnerability.

3

What products or software are affected?

The IETF HTTP/2 protocol is notably affected by this zero-day vulnerability.

4

How does the zero-day vulnerability exploit HTTP/2?

The vulnerability allows attackers to trigger rapid connections resets, resulting in a massive increase in traffic during the DDoS attack.

5

What makes this DDoS event significant compared to previous attacks?

This event is significant because it surpasses all previous recorded DDoS attacks in scale and intensity.

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