The FBI just saved the Christmas.
The U.S. Justice Department announced earlier today that the FBI has
seized domains of 15 “DDoS-for-hire” websites and charged three
individuals running some of these services.
DDoS-for-hire,
or “Booter” or “Stresser,” services rent out access to a network of
infected devices, which then can be used by anyone, even the least
tech-savvy individual, to launch distributed denial-of-service (DDoS)
attacks against any website and disrupt its access.
In recent years, multiple hacking groups ruined Christmas Day for millions of gamers by taking down PlayStation, Xbox networks and other gaming servers using massive DDoS attacks.
In April this year, the Dutch police took down the world’s biggest DDoS-for-hire service known as Webstresser that helped cyber criminals launch over 4 million attacks, and arrested its administrators.
The 15 booter domains that were selling access to DDoS attacks under the guise of network stress-testing services and seized by the FBI on Thursday include:
- critical-boot.com
- ragebooter.com
- anonsecurityteam.com
- downthem.org
- quantumstress.net
- booter.ninja
- bullstresser.net
- defcon.pro
- str3ssed.me
- defianceprotocol.com
- layer7-stresser.xyz
- netstress.org
- request.rip
- torsecurityteam.org
- Vbooter.org
These DDoS-for-Hire services
were allegedly used to target a wide array of victims in the United
States and abroad, including financial institutions, universities,
internet service providers, government systems, and various gaming
platforms.
On December 12, the U.S. Attorney’s Office also chargedDavid Bukoski, 23, of Pennsylvania, for operating Quantum Stresserāone
of the longest-running DDoS services in operation with over 80,000
customer subscriptions as of November 29 since its launch in 2012.
In 2018 alone, Quantum Stresser was used to launch more than 50,000
“actual or attempted” DDoS attacks targeting victims worldwide,
including in Alaska and California.
Besides the seizures of 15 booter services, the FBI has also filed
criminal complaints against two alleged cybercriminalsāMatthew Gatrel,
30, and Juan Martinez, 25āwho were allegedly affiliated with the
DDoS-for-hire services known as ‘Downthem’ and ‘Ampnode.’
Between October 2014 and November 2018, Downthem had more than 2000
customer subscriptions and had been used to “conduct, or attempt to
conduct, over 200,000 DDoS attacks,” according to the FBI.
The recent crackdown servers as a warning not only to other would-be
DDoS peddlers but also users who rent out these services, as the FBI
cautions that it will seek prosecution of anyone paying for such
services.