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Large DDoS, small extortion
negotiation is fineâ?¦ a weakness is presuming to know what the perp wants (and many times they don;t know themselves)
so engagement is good â??The Cuckoo's Eggâ?? is worth the readâ?¦
/bill
On 22May2014Thursday, at 8:23, Livingood, Jason <Jason_Livingood at cable.comcast.com> wrote:
> On 5/22/14, 12:51 AM, "Beleaguered Admin" <dealing.with.ddos at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> This has been going on for a long time -- almost every detail is
>> exactly the same as what is described here:
>> http://techcrunch.com/2014/03/03/meetup-suffering-significant-ddos-attack-
>> taking-it-offline-for-days/
>>
>> He is in regular communication (via whois info and other collected
>> contact data) asking for <$1000 USD sums to stop the attacks.
>
> That article said that the company didn¹t want to negotiate with
> criminals. As an aside I spent some time with a retired hostage negotiator
> on Tuesday (which was fascinating BTW). He actually said negotiation is
> always useful and sometimes paying a ransom demand can serve as a method
> to track where the money goes, to identify all the actors involved for
> later action (which may apply in this case). And sometimes financial
> demands are dropped as a result of negotiation.
>
>> Is it worth talking to law enforcement? Some of these have been >500k
>> costs to the customer, but we assume the person doing it isn't in any
>> western country, so maybe it doesn't even matter?
>
> You may find the law enforcement more interested in engaging within you
> than you might think.
>
> Jason
>