Difference between revisions of "Low Orbit Ion Cannon"
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==Terms== | ==Terms== | ||
− | * GUI - Graphical User Interface | + | * GUI - Graphical User Interface |
− | * Hive Mind - The collective | + | * Hive Mind - The collective group of users/machines connected to LOIC IRC server |
− | * Troll - | + | * Troll - maliciously tease someone in order to achieve an aggressive response (that the "troll" deems to be comedic) |
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references /> | <references /> |
Revision as of 02:56, 21 February 2017
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Contents
The GUI
- "Manual Mode (for pussies)" - Select this mode to manually select target and settings.
- "FUCKING HIVE MIND" - Select this mode to volunteer your computer to the hive mind, and allow it to select the target URL. Note this only allows control of the local LOIC client, and not the full machine.[3]
- IRC (Internet Resource Chat) server - Location where all machines (possibly in botnet) connect to be controlled by server administrator.
- Port - A electronic gate/path which information flows into or out of.[4] Defaults to port 80.
- "Select your target"
- "Ready?"
- IMMA CHARGIN MAH LAZER - Begin the HTTP/UDP/TCP bombardment of the specified address.
- "Attack options"
- Allows selection of TCP/UDP message on request log (that can be used to troll), timeout value, number of threads, and other customizations.
DoS/DDoS
DoS is an acronym that stands for "Denial of Service," and is often classified as a cyber attack. When a user attempts to visit a website, www.google.com for example, they are making a request to that page for information (ask for information that is stored in Google's servers to be loaded on the user's browser). The concept behind DoSing is that malicious attackers can continually send these HTTP/UDP/TCP requests to a website, and overload the site's capability to process all of the requests. If the attacker is able to achieve a sufficient threshold of requests, the site may "shut down" and be unable to process requests made by any user. This is where the attack coins its name as once the site is down, users that attempt to access the site are denied service to that page. [7]
DDoS stands for "Distributed Denial of Service," and refers to a combined effort of multiple machines attempting to shut down (DoS) a site. This set of multiple machines can take the form of multiple users with individual machines, a single user with a bot-net (link/elaborate), or a combination of the two. By utilizing more than one machine, this gives the attacker(s) the ability to send more HTTP requests. The more machines, the more requests per minute, and the more likely the site will be successfully shut down. [8]
Defenses against DoSing/DDoSing:
- ip filtering
- tollgate
Anonymous
Project Chanology and Operation Pay-back
(can only link to actual Wikipedia)
Ethical Implications
Pros
- stress testing websites' abilities to handle large numbers of requests at a time
- upholding First Amendment
- uniting tech community/hackers
Cons
- DDoSing a given website and "taking it down"
- incentivizing creation of BotNets
- anyone can use: don't understand gravity of actions
Terms
- GUI - Graphical User Interface
- Hive Mind - The collective group of users/machines connected to LOIC IRC server
- Troll - maliciously tease someone in order to achieve an aggressive response (that the "troll" deems to be comedic)
References
- ↑ https://sourceforge.net/projects/loic/
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 http://resources.infosecinstitute.com/loic-dos-attacking-tool/#gref
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Relay_Chat
- ↑ http://whatismyipaddress.com/port
- ↑ https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/networking/urls/definition.html
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_address
- ↑ https://www.us-cert.gov/ncas/tips/ST04-015
- ↑ http://www.digitalattackmap.com/understanding-ddos/