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View Full Version : One guy crashes Liberia's entire internet with a sail foam



Mushmouth
01-12-2019, 07:50 AM
Daniel Kaye admitted attacking an African phone company - inadvertently crashing Liberia's internet - in 2016.


In November 2016, working secretly out of Cyprus and controlling the botnet via his mobile phone, Kaye ordered it to overwhelm Lonestar's systems.

On his command, hundreds of thousands of the webcams began firing data requests at the west African company.


In Liberia, mobile phone users began to see their devices go offline.

The company called in cyber security consultants who attempted to repel the attack, but by that point it was too late because the botnet ran out of control.


Kaye had sent so much traffic at Lonestar, the entire national system jammed.

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-46840461

Cracka Jack
01-12-2019, 09:20 AM
This is why he was caught.


By this time time, National Crime Agency cyber specialists had also linked Kaye's Mirai #14 botnet to attacks against three British banks - Lloyds, Barclays and Halifax - in January 2017.

No one gives a shit about sail phoams in Africa, but fuck with the banks.....

Sandy
01-13-2019, 02:24 PM
This is why he was caught.


By this time time, National Crime Agency cyber specialists had also linked Kaye's Mirai #14 botnet to attacks against three British banks - Lloyds, Barclays and Halifax - in January 2017.

No one gives a shit about sail phoams in Africa, but fuck with the banks.....

A nigger botnet attacking European networks, sure. There wasn't anything successful about it, but someone in IT detected the attempted intrusions, then figured to report it to government agencies.

Boy
01-13-2019, 04:15 PM
Liberia the shithole right below that other shithole Sierra Leone. I could train a chimp to hack their shitty networks, think about it. They have niggers running their IT :lmao


As for what Mr. Sandman said:
"A nigger botnet attacking European networks, sure. There wasn't anything successful about it, but someone in IT detected the attempted intrusions, then figured to report it to government agencies."