September 21, 2016 By Dave McMillen 3 min read

The dust, waves and jubilation have settled on the sports festivities of this past summer. Since we’re in the business of cybersecurity, let’s reflect on one of the malicious activities that attempted to derail focus from this spirited event.

Going into the games, many analysts expected the event to be marred by cybercriminal activity spanning multiple types of network attack vectors. A reported attack by cybercrime group Anonymous seems to have confirmed those fears. Perhaps the most concerning part of this attack is the development of a custom tool that enables bad actors to conduct distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks. Are targeted tools the next big concern for those in charge of securing high-profile, global events?

Anonymous Tip

The first phase of the DDoS attacks primarily focused on several targets within Brazil. According to HackRead, the targets included the official websites of the Brazilian federal government, the state government of Rio de Janeiro, the Ministry of Sports and others. The second phase emphasized the retrieval of financial data and login credentials belonging to organizations such as the Brazilian Confederation of Modern Pentathlon, Brazilian Handball Confederation, Brazilian Confederation of Boxing and Brazilian Triathlon Confederation.

According to research by IBM X-Force, Anonymous posted a spreadsheet of this information to its private Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channel, alongside hashed passwords corresponding to registered users of all these sites. Anonymous tweeted about its website takedown initiative and posted the results on its Facebook page.

Takedown Tools

In the old days, users within the anonymous IRC channels had to use a tool called Low Orbit Ion Cannon (LOIC) to join coordinated DDoS attacks. The LOIC tool is connected to IRC in a way that enables remote control of its activity. Along with a capability called hivemind mode, computers equipped with LOIC can behave as part of a large botnet. That’s how IRC channel operators were able to quickly take down targeted websites.

The LOIC tool’s unique capabilities also came with some interesting insights. For example, anyone could login to an Anonymous Operations channel to see how many bots were in the hive. This allowed channel operators to tout the level of strength they had for a DDoS attack when they threatened a victim.

DDoS for Dummies

For their DDoS endeavors against the global sporting event, Anonymous operators took a different path. The group posted a link to another custom tool to its channel, which is part of the CyberGuerrilla IRC network, as well as on its Facebook and Twitter feeds. The tool runs on multiple Windows platforms backboned by Python.

To enable participants to join the attacks, Anonymous included instructions on how to anonymize end user connections while performing DDoS attacks against predefined targets. Users accessed the channel to look for any updates to the target list before joining the DDoS attacks.

Taking a deeper look at the tool, we found an executable file simply called ddos.exe, along with a library of Python-compiled bytecode files that allow for speedy execution. We also found several batch files that simply contained the target IPs of the intended victims. Although the tool itself contains a hardcoded list of targets, the list could be altered with a simple edit of the batch files.

Figure 1. Example contents of tool package (Source: IBM X-Force)

Once a target is selected and the attack is initiated, the tool spawns 9,000 individual attack instances and continues the DDoS until the participating Anonymous end user issues a “stop all” command. This tool also has built-in Tor capability. Unlike LOIC, Anonymous’ tool doesn’t report the volume of simultaneous attackers, making it impossible to tell how large the attack base is at any given time.

DDoS Mitigation

Anonymous includes a warning in all its public communications and threats: “Expect Us.” Since Anonymous is capable of significant, large-scale attacks, threats from its operations center should be taken seriously. However, your DDoS mitigation strategy should be an ongoing activity, not based around one particular campaign.

Organizations can proactively defend against DDoS attacks by staying on top of software updates and patches, implementing intrusion prevention systems (IPS), ensuring proper configuration of firewalls and access control lists, installing managed security solutions to stop DDoS traffic in its tracks and establishing a cohesive incident response plan.

Test your protection and your team’s response capabilities by simulating DDoS attacks via stress tests. Regular attack simulations allow companies to measure reaction and protection levels within a controlled environment, understand the capacity of their resources and prepare a speedy recovery from an attempted takedown.

Read the complete IBM research paper: Extortion by distributed denial of service attack

More from X-Force

A spotlight on Akira ransomware from X-Force Incident Response and Threat Intelligence

7 min read - This article was made possible thanks to contributions from Aaron Gdanski.IBM X-Force Incident Response and Threat Intelligence teams have investigated several Akira ransomware attacks since this threat actor group emerged in March 2023. This blog will share X-Force’s unique perspective on Akira gained while observing the threat actors behind this ransomware, including commands used to deploy the ransomware, active exploitation of CVE-2023-20269 and analysis of the ransomware binary.The Akira ransomware group has gained notoriety in the current cybersecurity landscape, underscored…

Hive0051 goes all in with a triple threat

13 min read - As of April 2024, IBM X-Force is tracking new waves of Russian state-sponsored Hive0051 (aka UAC-0010, Gamaredon) activity featuring new iterations of Gamma malware first observed in November 2023. These discoveries follow late October 2023 findings, detailing Hive0051's use of a novel multi-channel method of rapidly rotating C2 infrastructure (DNS Fluxing) to deliver new Gamma malware variants, facilitating more than a thousand infections in a single day. An examination of a sample of the lures associated with the ongoing activity reveals…

Ongoing ITG05 operations leverage evolving malware arsenal in global campaigns

13 min read - As of March 2024, X-Force is tracking multiple ongoing ITG05 phishing campaigns featuring lure documents crafted to imitate authentic documents of government and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Europe, the South Caucasus, Central Asia, and North and South America. The uncovered lures include a mixture of internal and publicly available documents, as well as possible actor-generated documents associated with finance, critical infrastructure, executive engagements, cyber security, maritime security, healthcare, business, and defense industrial production. Beginning in November 2023, X-Force observed ITG05…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today