Optus customers hit by China DDoS attack

 

UPDATE: Optus confirms DDoS attack on large Australian customer came from China.

Customers of Optus and its partner internet service providers experienced international traffic issues yesterday as a result of a distributed denial of service attack (DDoS) sourced from China and aimed at a large, unnamed Optus customer.

Customers in contact with iTnews.com.au confirmed the company experienced problems with international traffic from 12:30pm yesterday until 4pm.

Uecomm, a corporate ISP owned by Optus, told its Australian customers yesterday that the attack was sourced from China and was targeted at a single Australian customer on the Optus network.

At 3:55pm yesterday, Uecomm sent an SMS to network administrators with the following message:

"Update: Internet outage has been resolved. It was caused due to DDoS attack originating from China. Extended network and upstream provider have filtered traffic to restore traffic flow."

iTnews has since contacted Uecomm's technical support team and was told that this information came directly from SingTel Optus, Uecomm's upstream peer, during a conference call between Uecomm's Tier 3 network engineers and Optus network engineers yesterday afternoon.

Late last night, Optus released a statement confirming that while the network congestion was caused by a DDoS attack, it could not pinpoint the source of the attack.

But at 12:30pm today [Thursday April 15] Optus confirmed that the attack "originated in China". The carrier was unwilling to reveal the name of the customer targeted.

TIMELINE - THE DDOS ATTACK

WEDNESDAY APRIL 14, 2010 (all times in 24-hour clock)

1230 - Customers first report problems on international links from SingTel/Optus.

1300 - Uecomm tells customers that it has received notice of network issues and was working to resolve it. The ISP keeps customers abreast of the situation with regular SMS messages every 30 minutes.

1310 - Optus says the attack began at 1310, contrary to customer reports.

1525 - Optus says it resolved the problem.

1555 - Uecomm tells customers that the outage is resolved and attributes the problem to a DDoS attack originating from China.

"Update: Internet outage has been resolved. It was caused due to DDOS attack originating from China. Extended network and upstream provider have filtered traffic to restore traffic flow."

1710 - Uecomm reveals more on the attack in a further SMS to customers.

"At 1310 AEST international data services routing to the US via Sing Tel experienced congestion due to a DOS attack to a customer in Australia.  This resulted in customers experiencing slow throughput to some US internet sites. At 1525 EAST the Dos attack was mitigated, resolving the throughput issues. Congestion was experienced on one of the two peering links to the US via SingTel affecting some destinations to the US for corporate customers."


Optus customers hit by China DDoS attack
"DDoS attacks are a front for cowards. Nobody wins, and honest people trying to run a business and make a living are usually the party affected or ruined. Whenever we see DDoS attacks our employer ..."
By DJ
 
 
 
Comments: 12
Ace
Apr 15, 2010 12:53 PM
A curious timeline:

12:30pm
1:10pm
13:00pm
15:25pm
15.55pm
15:10pm
Can anyone else make sense of it? And btw, an am/pm is not necessary when quoting military time.
BrettWinterford
Apr 15, 2010 1:07 PM
That last one should have been 17:10 Ace. You're like a hawk! Corrected now.
Mordd
Apr 15, 2010 1:34 PM
So, who does the rumour mill currently think the target was is what I want to know....
Ace
Apr 15, 2010 1:45 PM
So hang on, you go 1310, then to 1300? Does Optus have a time machine?
BrettWinterford
Apr 15, 2010 2:18 PM
sorry mate. Sloppy on my part - the original timeline was purely from a Uecomm perspective, then Optus sent me through their own timeline - hence some of the conflicts.
Ace
Apr 15, 2010 2:49 PM
Looks like you've redeemed yourself in a nick of (military) time :o)
KB
Apr 15, 2010 3:35 PM
Here is just a "small" section of my router log. This has been happening on and off for at least 5 days.

Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:38 - UDP Packet - Source:96.6.40.12,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:38 - UDP Packet - Source:65.197.244.172,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:38 - UDP Packet - Source:124.40.51.147,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:38 - UDP Packet - Source:96.6.40.12,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:38 - UDP Packet - Source:65.197.244.172,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:39 - UDP Packet - Source:124.40.51.147,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:39 - UDP Packet - Source:96.6.40.12,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:39 - UDP Packet - Source:65.197.244.172,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:39 - UDP Packet - Source:124.40.51.147,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:40 - UDP Packet - Source:96.6.40.12,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:40 - UDP Packet - Source:65.197.244.172,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:40 - UDP Packet - Source:124.40.51.147,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:40 - UDP Packet - Source:96.6.40.12,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Thu, 2010-04-15 08:33:40 - UDP Packet - Source:65.197.244.172,3478 Destination:202.134.236.70,65447 - [DOSPOINT rule match]
Avengeer
Apr 15, 2010 7:09 PM
Since yesterday Optus is still facing issues with international roaming users. Data services are not working and there is no time estimate on fix even now..... Blackberries are struggling!!!!!


Bazwalt
Apr 16, 2010 9:22 AM
@KB - Yea, I've seen similar attempts on my own connection in the last month.Initially I thought it was simple port probing but the started to believe otherwise. It's recently died down however it appeared as though the attacks were coming from machines in China and they appeared to be attacking certain IP ranges.
Ace
Apr 16, 2010 5:28 PM
Good lord @Avengeer, does this mean people will have to get a life?
Ace
Apr 19, 2010 10:34 AM
I'm not entirely sure that narrowing the attack down to one or two of 1.3 billion people is that helpful. However, the extensive monitoring of internet traffic that the Chinese government does should hold clues as to the source. Will they tell? Probably not.
DJ
Apr 21, 2010 9:58 PM
DDoS attacks are a front for cowards.
Nobody wins, and honest people trying to run a business and make a living are usually the party affected or ruined.

Whenever we see DDoS attacks our employer encourages our support techs to spend time finding potential sources for prosecution.

Yeah, sometimes it's like a needle in the proverbial haystack, but we've actually caught a few and it was well and truly worth it.
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