Skip to main content

Black Lives Matter website hit by more than 100 DDoS attacks in seven months

black lives matter ddos attacks attack oct 21v2
Image used with permission by copyright holder
New data published this week demonstrates the scale and scope of cyber-attacks launched against the official website for the Black Lives Matter movement. Over the course of seven months in 2016, more than 100 distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks were leveled against the site, with the intention of making it inaccessible to visitors.

DDoS mitigation service Deflect Labs was called upon to help the organization respond to these attacks, and today the company published a report spanning from April to October. Attacks began to grow in size and frequency in July, followed by another substantial increase in September and October, according to a report from Motherboard.

Deflect Labs attributes the scale of DDoS operations against Black Lives Matter to the ease of access to materials necessary to carry out such an attack. Its report describes public documentation and malicious software as being “within easy reach,” and notes that actors would only need “basic technical skill” and as little money as $1 to pay for and implement an outage.

It’s thought that even the larger attacks on the Black Lives Matter site were carried out without the need for large infrastructure, and in that sense were akin to the Internet of Things botnet used to assault internet management company Dyn in October. Instead, traffic was apparently “reflected” from legitimate sites built with WordPress and Joomla.

Based on the access Deflect Labs has been given to all legitimate and malicious requests made to the Black Lives Matter website, the company has discerned that a group known as the Ghost Squad Hackers was responsible for much of the malicious traffic. However, there’s also evidence that many unassociated actors “jumped on the bandwagon” and contributed their own, less impactful attacks.

This report should demonstrate just how easy it is to carry out a DDoS attack. Malicious groups can target an organization without needing a huge amount of financial backing, or even in-depth technical knowledge about how to execute the attack — and that suggests that this kind of harassment is only going to become more common going forward.

Editors' Recommendations

Brad Jones
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Brad is an English-born writer currently splitting his time between Edinburgh and Pennsylvania. You can find him on Twitter…
Cloudflare just stopped one of the largest DDoS attacks ever
Hands on a laptop.

Cloudflare, a company that specializes in web security and distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack mitigation, just reported that it managed to stop an attack of an unprecedented scale.

The HTTPS DDoS attack was one of the largest such attacks ever recorded, and it came from unusual sources -- data centers.

Read more
Microsoft stopped the largest DDoS attack ever reported
Nvidia T4 Enterprise Server Wall

Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) attacks have become more common, and Microsoft recently published a blog post looking into the trends for such attacks on its own servers. In that post, the company says that, at one point, it stopped one of the largest-ever-recorded DDoS attacks on a Microsoft Azure server in Asia.

According to Microsoft's data, in November, an unnamed Azure customer in Asia was targeted with a DDoS attack with a throughput of 3.47 Tbps and a packet rate of 340 million packets per second (pps.) The attack came from 10,000 sources from multiple countries across the globe, including China, South Korea, Russia, Iran, and Taiwan. The attack itself lasted 15 minutes. Yet it is not the first one of such scale, as there were two additional attacks, one of 3.25 Tbps and another of 2.55 Tbps in December in Asia.

Read more
Cloudflare reports a massive 175% increase in DDoS attacks
Person using laptop with security graphics in front.

Cloudflare, a web infrastructure and security company, has just released a report titled "DDoS Attack Trends for Q4 2021." According to Cloudflare, 2021 has been a particularly bad year in terms of DDoS attacks.

Ransom distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks increased by over 175 percent quarter over quarter, highlighting the large scale of the problem described by Cloudflare.

Read more