The Tiger Effect and Internet DDoS 191
An anonymous reader writes "Many US and Canadian ISPs thought they were under a massive denial of service attack yesterday — traffic spiked by hundreds of gigabits across North America. Turns out that the traffic was due to live streaming of the U.S. Open and Tiger Woods nail-biting victory."
naming this effect? (Score:5, Funny)
Tigerdotted
I Got wooded?
ok /.ers you can do better. I need to update my ids logs to take this into consideration ;)
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There is nothing more unpleasant than a golf course near a resort in a hot climate. It is like being on holiday in a swamp. Best example - Costa del Fuste on Fuerteventura.
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Re:naming this effect? (Score:5, Funny)
Jennifered? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Jennifered? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Jennifered? (Score:5, Funny)
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You learn something new every day (Score:5, Funny)
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Not Firefox? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Not Firefox? (Score:5, Funny)
O <--- You
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(Credit [seenonslash.com] and credit [slashdot.org])
Re:Not Firefox? (Score:5, Funny)
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Tiger? Euro2008? (Score:4, Interesting)
Tiger effect? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Tiger effect? (Score:5, Funny)
Hint to Steve Jobs genuflecting tards: No, life is not all about Apple. No go outside and get some fresh air. Now.
Re:Tiger effect? (Score:5, Funny)
Wow. Get some air. You're right. And it's a really nice day out. Head on out and get some air.
You just gave me an excellent idea. I'll just pop out to the Apple Store and get a MacBook Air.
Office bandwith (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Office bandwith (Score:5, Funny)
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The VAST majority of offices have no TV service whatsoever. They do have Internet as a cost of doing business, though. Major golf event that happens during the business day? You bet your bottom dollar that the C?O and most VP's are going to be watching a live stream of it.
Re:Office bandwith (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe then they will enable multicast.
If he had lost... (Score:2)
Oops. (Score:3, Funny)
Oh sorry, that was me. I downloaded several seasons of Star Trek: The Next Generation. Seriously, hundreds of gigabits across North America is a problem? 500 gigabits is approximately 62 GB.
Re:Oops. (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Oops. (Score:5, Funny)
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Given that, what was this golf thing, something like 15-20 Jeremys?
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Nail-biting victory? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Nail-biting victory? (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know what happened, but I've gotten kind of hooked on the major tournaments. There's enough camera coverage that they actually spend most of the time with a decent golfer hitting the ball, so its not just a bunch of guys walking around, and they're almost exclusively in high definition.
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I don't know about you, but if I don't like something, seeing it in HD isn't exactly going to help much.
Re:Nail-biting victory? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Nail-biting victory? (Score:5, Interesting)
It's like the manager who can't possibly understand how hard it can be to add search functionality to the program... I mean, all you have to do is add that button that says "Search", right?
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I don't think anyone doubts the level of skill involved.
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Wow! Could Thse ISPs be in Trouble!? (Score:5, Interesting)
Your thoughts are most welcome and I thank you in advance for sharing your thoughts!
Re:Wow! Could Thse ISPs be in Trouble!? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Wow! Could Thse ISPs be in Trouble!? (Score:5, Insightful)
Great.
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I had a machine of mine fall victim to one of those automated ssh attacks and it was very interesting to sit back and disect the guts of the botn
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Re:Wow! Could Thse ISPs be in Trouble!? (Score:5, Interesting)
From the looks of this, co-ordinated effort is nothing more than a couple thousand bot computers infected with a 'lets watch sports over the net' worm. Think of it. One bot net with 100,000 computers all trying to watch ESPN at the same time, and those that can, also trying to watch something from Europe at the same time.
One word: multicast
Uni-casting VOD over the Internet will keep doing this over and over again and ISPs will continue to blame file sharing for their lack of both foresight and bandwidth.
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> Uni-casting VOD over the Internet will keep doing this over and over again
But multicast is not VOD, because the stream happens when the stream happens. You'd have to consult some sort of schedule, and connect to the multicast stream at the right time. I'll bet that given time, there would even be publications, either online or perhaps even dead-tree, to distribute these schedules. Whatta concept.
We've accused the cable companies of trying to turn the Internet into TV. I
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If there is a multicast stream of the movies available, one started every 15 or 30 minutes that I could join, I'd be totally happy with that. On demand in 30 minutes or less and no pizza guy to have to be nice to. It would work for me. I'm never in that much of a rush to see a movie that it has to start RIGHT NOW dog maddit!
The cable company ends up with 6-10 streams for each movie
Re:Wow! Could Thse ISPs be in Trouble!? (Score:5, Informative)
We have 500 users sharing a dual T1, all wanting to watch this. So why did business transactions begin failing? I wonder.
Yea, we saw this.
Since it was SSL we can't inspect it at the application layer for QoS. Since it's a huge number of IP ranges, that gets us too. We can't transparently proxy SSL so Squid can't help. It's a flash stream over https.
So we QoSed the end users on port 443 in this case. 300b/s seems about right.
Lost production? (Score:2)
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If anything this has saved allot of staples that would otherwise have been fired at the waste paper bin.
omfg!ponies (Score:5, Insightful)
That's about as worthy of an article as one "discovering" Euro Cup 2008 matches causes certain European streets to be abandoned for ninety minutes.
I can understand how such a traffic increase would be reason for alarm for the average network administrator, but you'd think service providers whose main business is the infrastructure would be aware of major streaming events. This shouldn't have surprised so many people.
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Damn good golf, too.
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the world is out of balance (Score:3, Insightful)
DDoG?
better streaming? (Score:3, Insightful)
Multicast. (Score:5, Interesting)
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Yep, this is exactly the sort of situation that IP Multicast was created for. It has been part of the IP RFCs since forever. Maybe more incidents like this will convince more ISPs to configure their routers to support it, so we could start using it.
The more time passes, the less likely I think we'll ever use it. Multicast requires that all the people watch the same thing at the same time. Sure there are exceptions like this but what most people want the net for is surfing random stuff like YouTube, not being tied to some schedule. Plus being individual, hopefully I can pause the stream and pick it up a bit later, rewind a bit if I want to watch something again and so on. Multicast has all the convinience of TV without a DVR, unless you build the DVR
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The overall bandwidth would be mu
firefox (Score:5, Funny)
Match (Score:3, Interesting)
Fortunately Hong Kong's Star Sports was accessible through Sopcast P2P.
Great match! I watched the back nine and the sudden death playoff hole. Unfortunately the commentators were horrible. They did not announce the length of the puts (huge annoyance) and they spoke when there was nothing to say!
We want Jim Nantz, or perhaps the British announcers at The Open.
Re:Match (Score:5, Interesting)
Fortunately Hong Kong's Star Sports was accessible through Sopcast P2P.
The best part? It's not really all that impressive nowadays. But the entire concept was unthinkable to most people even 10 years ago.
What on earth (Score:2)
If it was on Tuesday then it was a repeat (Score:2)
Here's the plan (Score:2)
2) Advertise how the internet can't handle the bandwidth, scream fire and brimstone, exclaim that you may not be able to see Tiger again in a playoff if this isn't fixed and sell network upgrades.
3) Profit!
Examine the traffic perhaps? (Score:3, Informative)
I'm not in favor of indiscriminate snooping, but as a security professional, this would be the first thing I would expect.
Price per GB! (Score:2)
Scary but true.
Troubling it wasn't recognized sooner (Score:5, Insightful)
It makes me nervous that it even got to that point. How can a competent ISP confuse DDOS attacks with streaming video (most likely, the same streaming video sent to all people)? Isn't there a pattern there? Couldn't they see the connections were all coming from the same server or block of servers? Couldn't they see all of the connections were using the same protocol? Couldn't they see they were all using the same port?
How the hell do they confuse that with a DDOS? I am just a lowly part-time IT network manager at my company and even I can see the difference between streaming video and "other bad stuff".
Someone smarter than me please help me understand more about this. How did this get far enough to convince the ISP's they were being DDOS'd?
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Same at work... (Score:2)
Pretty fun.
Net neutrality (Score:2)
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My opinion anyway; Feel free to rebut it.
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Please explain how this is negative?
It was good quality video.. I watched. (Score:5, Informative)
I was surprised at how good the video looked. I have tried several other events in the past, and have always been disappointed, or completely unable to view it. Although, for the NCAA Final Four this year, I was finally able to actually watch a game after failing the last few years. I had to use Win2K within a VMware VM, but it did work.
The U.S. Open video worked directly from my Mac, had decent sized video, and was completely watchable on my laptop. Nice job USGA, NBC, etc.
What Cable Providers are afraid of (Score:5, Insightful)
They're worried this kind of usage will eat into their own TV viewership. What better way to prevent that from happening than by charging those who use it.
What will end up happening is customers will get in a tizzy and without suitable alternatives lawsuits will fly.
In the end either they'll have to abandon these plans or competition will be forced into the market.
IpTV, not ready yet. (Score:2, Interesting)
Olympics (Score:2)
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In a fantasy land far, far away.... (Score:2)
They were all educated computer professionals....good times...
I hate to tell you this, but your delusion that educated computer professionals are "avid sports non-fans" is not only delusory, but offensive to both educated computer professional (assumes geeks can't be jocks) and sports fans (assumes jocks can't be geeks). The fact is that jocks and geeks are heavily overlapping sets, and have been since long before there was an Internet. Many of us who respect and both the body and the minds have nothing but contempt for those who only respect the body and those who
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This was live so would definatly have worked, and it doesnt take a genious to implement a buffering system which lets non-live programs benifit from a 99% reduction in bandwidth needs.