As Election Day approaches,Watch Games of Seduction Online tension is rising. Schools are canceling classes. Investors are waiting cautiously. Law enforcement is on alert for violence at polling locations. And when what seemed like half the internet shut down last week, fear of a large-scale cyberattack joined that list.
Sam Altman, president of the start-up accelerator Y Combinator, was one of many to ask the question: Is the U.S. about to be on the receiving end of a major attack timed for the election?
"That attack on Dyn felt to me like a warm-up to something or a practice run," Altman told Mashable. "Like someone going after something very specific."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Following the attack, concerns about a massive effort to disrupt the internet on Election Day started to percolate in the tech community. The attack came in an election season in which cybersecurity has been an underlying concern thanks to hacking attributed to Russia.
The Dyn attack, though different from the hacks that ended up making public massive amounts of Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton campaign emails, only added to the broader fears. The FBI has warned state election boards to be on alert — though they may be powerless to do much about significant attacks.
Cybersecurity experts that spoke with Mashable, however, were not particularly worried about large-scale attacks directed at the internet itself. They could not, however, rule anything out.
Most components of US Election Day infrastructure don't rely on the internet, so an attack wouldn't directly impact actual votes. But if the internet were down, people wouldn't be able to look up polling place locations or other voting information. A widespread cyberattack could cause fear about exactly what's going on on Election Day and even sway some voters to stay home.
According to Dan Wallach, a computer science professor at Rice University who studies the security of electronic voting systems, voting machines are never connected to the internet. Voter registration databases will mostly be printed out by Election Day, but counties that allow voting in more than one polling place and use electronic voter registration information could be affected.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Media reports of election results, of course, could be knocked out of commission by a DDoS attack. And last-minute get out the vote efforts would definitely be disrupted by a cyberattack.
"That kind of attack would dramatically disrupt get out the vote efforts," Joseph Lorenzo Hall, chief technologist for the Center for Democracy and Technology, told Mashable.
There are cyberattacks every day. They just usually aren't as effective as the one that took out access to several major websites and services last Friday.
Widespread problems with websites including Spotify, Netflix and Twitter, were the result of a DDoS or "distributed denial of service" attack against the domain name system host Dyn.
Unidentified hackers used 100,000 devices to overwhelm Dyn's DNS systems. By overwhelming Dyn with traffic from what were likely poorly protected devices like connected TVs and DVRs, hackers were able to prevent people from accessing any website that relied on Dyn's DNS services.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
DDoS attacks are relatively simple and only require massive scale, not complex skill. Since the attacks don't need to target only one website and can instead take down huge swaths of the internet, they're pretty scary on a day as big as Nov. 8.
SEE ALSO: Hacking the presidential election just isn't possible (yet)"We see new levels of attacks, new zero days, new strains every day," Dale Drew, chief security officer for the internet service provider Level 3 Communications, told Mashable. "We have been trained to expect the worst case scenario every time we see an attack."
Last week's cyberattack primarily affected the East Coast. Another attack could be geographically based, or cover a wider range. That doesn't mean it won't be as effective the next time around.
Companies like Dyn face cyberattacks every day. Most are fended off, or don't affect as many clients and people as last week's. In the aftermath of this attack, clients who use one DNS provider have already added a second or ramped up their security in other ways, Hall said.
If anything, the chances of a similar attack on Election Day are lower, Hall said.
"No one seriously going to use that to disrupt or attack elections would have done something so blatant and so public," Hall said.
No one has claimed responsibility for the recent cyberattack, but security experts know that it came from a bot net using the base code Mirai. The hackers behind the bot net were likely displaying the net's power to anyone interested in its services for hire, Hall said. He thought it unlikely the same group would try another attack so soon afterward.
SEE ALSO: This mesmerizing map shows what cyberattacks look likeStill, people are worried. Ahead of one of the most tense days in American history, cybersecurity experts advised clients of DNS providers to widen their security options.
Dyn is preparing for future attacks whether or not they fall on Election Day.
"As you may imagine, we cannot predict future DDoS attacks," Dyn spokesman Adam Coughlin told Mashable. "We have learned a great deal from the recent attack and very quickly put protective measures in place during the attack, and we are extending and scaling those measures aggressively. Additionally, Dyn has been active in discussions with internet infrastructure providers to share learnings and mitigation methods for future attacks."
And people at home — whose devices might have been part of the attack without their knowledge — should check exactly what they have plugged in before they head out to the polls.
'Black Mirror' just released a super creepy trailer for its upcoming season8 Thanksgiving comedy episodes you need to rewatch this holidayNew Apple Holiday ad pushes iPhone X and AirPods, but not much magicThis bakery is selling bread made from insectsThis 'Game of Thrones' casting news could hint at a Season 8 storylineThis teddy was flown 200 miles to reunite with the little girl who lost himLotteria's pizzaChristmas at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter is fittingly magical8 Thanksgiving comedy episodes you need to rewatch this holidayApple might bring gigabit LTE internet speeds to next year's iPhonesThis journalist got stuck in a glass lift for almost an hour and it's an epic sagaYou can still buy the SNES Classic if you missed Black FridayTruck carrying 30 tonnes of cheese crashes, everyone makes same jokeApple will launch a new iPhone SE in 2018, report saysPrince Harry and Meghan Markle are officially engagedThis live TV celebrity eating challenge is the stuff of nightmaresJames Cameron almost hit Harvey Weinstein with an Oscar statueParents attempt to take selfie, accidentally record hilarious videoNew York Times responds to criticism of Nazi sympathizer profilePixar's 'Coco' wins Thanksgiving box office, crushes 'Justice League' Portugal vs. France 2024 livestream: Watch Euro 2024 quarter final for free Best 4th of July sale deals: Best outdoor deals CES 2025: AI Xiaomi announces Electric Motor V8s won its 10 Million Technology Award · TechNode iPhone umbrellas? This hack prevents auto Huawei and China’s GAC make new progress on EV tie Tesla China abruptly launches redesigned Model Y at higher price · TechNode Kartal vs. Gauff 2024 livestream: Watch Wimbledon for free Washington Mystics vs. Las Vegas Aces 2024 livestream: Watch WNBA for free 2024 solar eclipse: Everything you need to know Volkswagen and China’s Xpeng to collaborate on charging network expansion · TechNode NASA finds captivating ocean world is making oxygen. Here's how much. NASA's new images reveal what happened to its crashed Mars helicopter Best 4th of July deals 2024: Save on robot vacuums, headphones, kitchen items, and more Spain vs. Germany 2024 livestream: Watch Euro 2024 quarter final for free Best Home Depot deals: Save big on backyard items and much more Best 4th of July kitchen deals of 2024 Honor denies claims that CEO Zhao Ming has resigned · TechNode SpaceX Starship launch stream: Watch the third launch live CES 2025: Ling.ai debuts child
1.2236s , 8230.515625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Games of Seduction Online】,Charm Information Network