XML RSSSubscribe to Our Site Via Your Favorite Feed

XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Subscribe with Bloglines


Home
Desktop Blog Desktop Scrubber Blog
Site Map Help
Facts And Myths Myths
Threats
FABS
solutions
Free Diagnostic Test OK- It's Test Time
What's Your Goal - Be An Affiliate Or Own A Franchise? Affiliate Program
My Personal Story My Story
About Me
Products And Company Why Our Company
My Repair Reports
Our Cause
Your Parachute Color Open Parachute
Rich-Poor Buyers
Call Me
Automated Marketing Auto Prospecting
Auto Emailing Now !
Stop Cold-Calling!
FREE LEADS!!!
Site Resources
Zeus Robots
Pro Sales Lists & Contacts Pro Sales Leads
Reliable Mentors Sara Ding Story
7 Big Lies
Madam  Stud
Do You Have A Watchdog MLM Watchdogs
My MLM Mentors
Identity Theft Tool Identity Theft
FTC Rulings And Leads "Robo"  State Laws
FTC
FTC Robo Rulings
FTC Leads- Rules
A Website That Works SBI! Comparisions
Want To Hire Me?
Special Products & Offers Ham Towers 4 Sale
My General Store
General Store Pantry
Our Warehouse
Our Basement
 

Who Is Watching You Through Your Computer?

Denial-Of-Service Has "Octopus-Like" Features and Characteristics

When You See

When You See "Access Denied" on your Computer Screen-It's Too Late...

You Should Have Already Taken The Free Diagnostic Test...You Should Have Taken Time To Call Your Invisus Rep...You Should Have Recognized Your 'False-Sense-Of-Security"

If you had become an INVISUS iSimplify Services Customer this message would probably never have appeared on your screen…

Denial-of-Services Has Many Faces & Many Forms

Denial of Service...

On the Internet, a denial of service (DoS) attack is an incident in which a user or organization is deprived of the services of a resource they would normally expect to have.

Typically, the loss of service is the inability of a particular network service, such as e-mail, to be available or the temporary loss of all network connectivity and services. In the worst cases, for example, a Web site accessed by millions of people can occasionally be forced to temporarily cease operation. A denial of service attack can also destroy programming and files in a computer system. Although, usually intentional and malicious, a denial of service attack can sometimes happen accidentally. A denial of service attack is a type of security breach to a computer system that does not usually result in the theft of information or other security loss. However, these attacks can cost the target person or company a great deal of time and money.


Common Forms of Denial-of-Service Attacks are:

  • Buffer Overflow Attacks…The most common kind of DoS attack is simply to send more traffic to a network address than the programmers who planned its data buffers anticipated someone might send. The attacker may be aware that the target system has a weakness that can be exploited or the attacker may simply try the attack in case it might work.
  • A few of the better-known attacks based on the buffer characteristics of a program or system include: Sending e-mail messages that have attachments with 256-character file names to Netscape and Microsoft mail programs…
  • Sending oversized Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) packets (this is also known as the Packet Internet or Inter-Network Groper (ping) of death)…
  • Sending to a user of the Pine e-mail program, a message with a "From" address larger than 256 characters…
  • SYN Attack...When a session is initiated between the Transport Control Program (TCP) client and server in a network, a very small buffer space exists to handle the usually rapid "hand-shaking" exchange of messages that sets up the session.
  • The Session Attack...establishing packets include a SYN field that identifies the sequence in the message exchange. An attacker can send a number of connection requests very rapidly and then fail to respond to the reply. This leaves the first packet in the buffer so that other, legitimate connection requests can't be accommodated. Although the packet in the buffer is dropped after a certain period of time without a reply, the effect of many of these bogus connection requests is to make it difficult for legitimate requests for a session to get established. In general, this problem depends on the operating system providing correct settings or allowing the network administrator to tune the size of the buffer and the timeout period.
  • Teardrop Attack...This type of denial of service attack exploits the way that the Internet Protocol (IP) requires a packet that is too large for the next router to handle be divided into fragments. The fragment packet identifies an offset to the beginning of the first packet that enables the entire packet to be reassembled by the receiving system. In the teardrop attack, the attacker's IP puts a confusing offset value in the second or later fragment. If the receiving operating system does not have a plan for this situation, it can cause the system to crash.
  • Smurf Attack...In this attack, the perpetrator sends an IP ping (or "echo my message back to me") request to a receiving site The ping packet specifies that it be broadcast to a number of hosts within the receiving site's local network. The packet also indicates that the request is from another site, the target site that is to receive the denial of service. (Sending a packet with someone else's return address in it is called spoofing the return address.) The result will be lots of ping replies flooding back to the innocent, spoofed host. If the flood is great enough, the spoofed host will no longer be able to receive or distinguish real traffic.
  • Viruses...Computer viruses, which replicate across a network in various ways, can be viewed as denial-of-service attacks where the victim is not usually specifically targeted but simply a host unlucky enough to get the virus. Depending on the particular virus, the denial of service can be hardly noticeable ranging all the way through disastrous.
  • Physical Infrastructure Attacks...Here, someone may simply snip a fiber optic cable. This kind of attack is usually mitigated by the fact that traffic can sometimes quickly be rerouted. There are ways of preventing many forms of DoS attacks


Lock It Down Like Ft. Knox


Here Is Your Solution:

  • Get Off the Anti-Virus/Spyware Treadmill, Today!
  • Test Your Computer and Learn Your Computer's Current Condition [via the No-Charge, Diagnostic Test]
  • Lock Down Your Computer Like Ft. Knox...
  • Make Your Computer Invisible [the meaning of the Latin Word – INVISUS] to Hackers, Predators, and Stop The Zombie Attacks Before They Start!
  • Do It Today – Right Now, before you go to another webpage! Don’t procrastinate like I did and almost lose your computer to professional hackers / Cybercriminals or worse, get hacked and have your computer turned into a “Zombie” computer!


Go Take The Test Right Now: Click On This Link - Get True "Peace-Of-Mind" TODAY!



Do You Know Anybody That Has Ever Experienced a "Denial-of-Service Attack?"

On the Internet, a denial of service (DoS) attack is an incident in which a user or organization is deprived of the services of a resource they would normally expect to have.

In the worst cases, for example, a Web site accessed by millions of people can occasionally be forced to temporarily cease operation.

Do You Have an Experience - or know someone that did - that you would like to share?

Enter Your Title Here For Your Article

Tell Us Your Story in the Window Below! [ ? ]

Upload A Picture (optional) Here - If You Wish [ ? ]

Add a Picture/Graphic Caption (optional) 

Click here to upload more images (optional)

Author Information (optional)

To receive credit as the author, enter your information below.

Your Name

(first or full name)

Your Location

(ex. City, State, Country)

Submit Your Contribution

Check box to agree to these submission guidelines.


(You can preview and edit on the next page)




footer for denial-of-service-attacks page