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Security The Internet Communications Government Network Networking

Democrats Ask FBI To Probe Reported FCC Cyberattack (thehill.com) 53

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Hill: A group of Democratic senators is asking the FBI to investigate an alleged cyberattack on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) website earlier this month. In a letter to acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe sent Wednesday, the senators asked the bureau to "investigate the source" of the distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack. "Any cyberattack on a federal network is very serious," Democratic Sens. Brian Schatz (Hawaii), Al Franken (Minn.), Patrick Leahy (Vt.), Ed Markey (Mass.), and Ron Wyden (Ore.) wrote. "This particular attack may have denied the American people the opportunity to contribute to what is supposed to be a fair and transparent process, which in turn may call into question the integrity of the FCC's rulemaking proceedings," they wrote. In the Wednesday letter to McCabe, the senators asked to be briefed by the FBI on the matter by June 23. "We ask that the FBI prioritize this matter and investigate the source of this attack," they wrote. On May 8, the FCC claimed that it was a victim of "multiple" DDoS attacks. The alleged attacks occurred after comedian John Oliver spurred millions of Americans to file comments with the FCC in favor of net neutrality. "Many had attributed the website's slowdown to the volume of comments produced by Oliver's segment, but the FCC instead blamed malicious actors days later," reports The Hill.
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Democrats Ask FBI To Probe Reported FCC Cyberattack

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  • It's adorable they think Comcast isn't going to get their way.
  • The input from the public is just a joke, Pai was put in specifically to dismantle any rights the public had. Just wait till neutrality is removed, it will be legal to deny access to all customers if a new appointee tries to get net neutrality back. Oh you will complain on line in a forum or start your own website? It will be legal to block access to those too.
  • by Revek ( 133289 ) on Thursday June 01, 2017 @06:56AM (#54524251)

    Help! All those citizens with opinions are attacking us with their words.

    • by DeplorableCodeMonkey ( 4828467 ) on Thursday June 01, 2017 @07:35AM (#54524385)

      Considering that there was a huge stream of anti-NN comments, many of which came in the names of people who are actually dead [bbc.com], something is off. But hey, let's dismiss their claims without any investigation because we can study the text and provenance of those comments without even looking at a database dump. We're awesome like that!

    • Help! All those citizens with opinions are attacking us with their words.

      Which, so far, folks are still able to do. It's not, however, guaranteed to continue forever.

      The movement away from any sense of decorum in the news reporting business is particularly disturbing, and all sides of the political spectrum are to blame. When every negative news story can be discounted as a partisan attack, and the Party faithful on both sides of the aisle fall in lockstep with their representative news coverage(s), the rational voice of the few left still rooting for the good of the nation fa

      • When every negative news story can be discounted as a partisan attack,

        You can discount anything and everything as a partisan attack but the reality is that some issues like net neutrality are totally non-partisan. What this means is that someone is deceiving their audience.

        the Party faithful

        Anyone that puts their faith in any group or organization with financial incentives will be proven a fool in time.

      • Even better without neutrality access to feedback can be blocked entirely, say if someone is trying to expand neutrality rights or has a pro-neutrality webpage. ISP can even lock users into specific pro company policy sites and deny access to others. Don't like that? Well without competition over high speed access you can just go to cellular or one choice of dsl, all of which likely have the same limitations.
  • by dbIII ( 701233 ) on Thursday June 01, 2017 @06:57AM (#54524253)
    Remember the Stratfor hack?
    If you are hacked the FBI are the ones to ask, especially the question "was it one of your informants doing the hacking" and "did you know about the hack"?
  • by swb ( 14022 ) on Thursday June 01, 2017 @07:10AM (#54524295)

    The FBI will release a statement indicating that "evidence suggests" a DDoS attack but with no actionable evidence indicating who was behind it or what the motives were and that no further investigation is possible.

    Really, nothing will change except that these Senators will be have talking points for a press conference or their next speech to voters about their affirmative stance on network neutrality.

  • It as an automated astroturf campain that left thousands of comments by dead people and people whos IDs were stolen in favor or getting rid of net neutrality rules. that's probably what gave the impression of a ddos.

"...a most excellent barbarian ... Genghis Kahn!" -- _Bill And Ted's Excellent Adventure_

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