American Idol mock site slammed with DDoS attack

By

A popular but controversial website that asks fans of "American Idol" to vote for the least talented contestant each week continues to be slammed by a distributed denial-of-service attack, the site's manager told SCMagazine.com.

American Idol mock site slammed with DDoS attack
VoteForTheWorst.com, said to be the hit show's most popular web destination behind the official site, has angered "Idol" purists since its launch in 2004 because it seeks to keep around the most entertaining, not necessarily the most talented, singers.

Site owner Dave Della Terza, 24, announced on the site today that the sluggishness in recent days is due to an attack, presumably a DoS condition.

As many people have noticed, VFTW was down for a good portion of the day [Wednesday]," he said. "The site started having problems Tuesday due to an increased flow of traffic, but then Wednesday the site went down because of an attack.

"Someone was obviously threatened enough by the site's freedom of speech that they wanted to try to shut us down. Of course it didn't work, and we're back for now."

Nathan Palmer, who manages the site and server, told SCMagazine.com in an email that the site fell victim Wednesday to an all-day DDoS attack using spoofed IP addresses. The site was pounded by 400 megabits of traffic per second, beginning at 12:30 a.m., about two hours after "Idol" went off the air.

quot;About six hours later, we changed IP addresses to get away from the attack and two hours later the attack was back on the new IP address," he said. "It was clearly targeting the domain name and not just the IP."

Alexa currently ranks votefortheworst.com as the world's 21,105th most trafficked site. Hits have gone up more than 8,000 percent in the last three months after the show began airing this winter.

The site, which shock jock Howard Stern promotes almost daily on his Sirius radio show, has attracted more visitors than ever before in recent days.

 During that time, the site has been stumping for Sanjaya Malakar, a 17-year-old boy from Washington with a sweet voice but who appears so overmatched that cranky judge Simon Cowell has threatened to quit if he wins.

But each week, when one seemingly more talented contestant is cut based on viewer votes, Malakar keeps surviving and advancing to the next round. The race is down to nine now. The site defends its purpose as a way to guarantee great reality television programming.

quot;We agree that a fish out of water is entertaining, and we want to acknowledge this fact by encouraging people to make an even funnier show by helping the amusing antagonists stick around," the site states.

Chicago Sun-Times for its Wednesday editions that he receives many nasty emails - some containing death threats - from fans who don't support what he is doing.

One such "Idol" fan has even gone as far as to announce on her MySpace page that will go without food until Sanjaya is booted off. Her hunger strike, which she is documenting on the social networking site, entered Day 12 today.

quot;People take this show so seriously," he said. "It's just a cheesy entertainment reality show."
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Tags:

Most Read Articles

India's alarm over Chinese spying rocks CCTV makers

India's alarm over Chinese spying rocks CCTV makers

Hackers abuse modified Salesforce app to steal data, extort companies

Hackers abuse modified Salesforce app to steal data, extort companies

Cyber companies hope to untangle weird hacker codenames

Cyber companies hope to untangle weird hacker codenames

Victoria's Secret pulls down website amid security incident

Victoria's Secret pulls down website amid security incident

Log In

  |  Forgot your password?