NETSCOUT announced findings from its 1H2022 DDoS Threat Intelligence Report. The findings demonstrate how sophisticated cybercriminals have become at bypassing defences with new DDoS attack vectors and successful methodologies.
“By constantly innovating and adapting, attackers are designing new, more effective DDoS attack vectors or doubling down on existing effective methodologies,” said Richard Hummel, threat intelligence lead at NETSCOUT. “In the first half of 2022, attackers conducted more pre-attack reconnaissance, exercised a new attack vector called TP240 PhoneHome, created a tsunami of TCP flooding attacks, and rapidly expanded high-powered botnets to plague network-connected resources. In addition, bad actors have openly embraced online aggression with high-profile DDoS attack campaigns related to geopolitical unrest, which have had global implications.”
NETSCOUT’s Active Level Threat Analysis System (ATLAS™) compiles DDoS attack statistics from most of the world’s ISPs, large data centres, and government and enterprise networks. This data represents intelligence on attacks occurring in over 190 countries, 550 industries, and 50,000 autonomous system numbers (ASNs). NETSCOUT’s ATLAS Security Engineering and Response Team (ASERT) analyses and curates this data to provide unique insights in its biannual report. Key findings from the 1H2022 NETSCOUT DDoS Threat Intelligence Report include:
- There were 6,019,888 global DDoS attacks in first half of 2022.
- TCP-based flood attacks (SYN, ACK, RST) remain the most used attack vector, with approximately 46% of all attacks continuing a trend that started in early 2021
- DNS water-torture attacks accelerated into 2022 with a 46% increase primarily using UDP query floods, while carpet-bombing attacks experienced a big comeback toward the end of the second quarter; overall, DNS amplification attacks decreased by 31% from 2H2021 to 1H2022
- The new TP240 PhoneHome reflection/amplifications DDoS vector was discovered in early 2022 with a record-breaking amplification ratio of 4,293,967,296:1; swift actions eradicated the abusable nature of this service
- Malware botnet proliferation grew at an alarming rate, with 21,226 nodes tracked in the first quarter to 488,381 nodes in the second, resulting in more direct-path, application-layer attacks
Geopolitical unrest spawns increased DDoS attacks
As Russian ground troops entered Ukraine in late February, there was a significant uptick in DDoS attacks targeting governmental departments, online media organisations, financial firms, hosting providers, and cryptocurrency-related firms, as previously documented*. However, the ripple effect resulting from the war had a dramatic impact on DDoS attacks in other countries including:
- Ireland experienced a surge in attacks after providing service to Ukrainian organisations
- India experienced a measurable increase in DDoS attacks following its abstention from the UN Security Council and General Assembly votes condemning Russia’s actions in Ukraine
- On the same day, Taiwan endured its single-highest number of DDoS attacks after making public statements supporting Ukraine, as with Belize
- Finland experienced a 258% increase in DDoS attacks year-over-year, coinciding with its announcement to apply for NATO membership
- Poland, Romania, Lithuania, and Norway were targeted by DDoS attacks linked to Killnet; a group of online attackers aligned with Russia
- While the frequency and severity of DDoS attacks in North America remained relatively consistent, satellite telecommunications providers experienced an increase in high-impact DDoS attacks, especially after providing support for Ukraine’s communications infrastructure
- Russia experienced a nearly three time increase in daily DDoS attacks since the conflict with Ukraine began and continued through the end of the reporting period
Similarly, as tensions between Taiwan, China, and Hong Kong escalated in 1H2022, DDoS attacks against Taiwan regularly occurred in concert with related public events.
Unparalleled intelligence
No other vendor sees and knows more about DDoS attack activity and best practices in attack protection than NETSCOUT. In addition to publishing the DDoS Threat Intelligence Report, NETSCOUT also presents its highly curated real-time DDoS attack data on its Omnis Threat Horizon** portal to give customers visibility into the global threat landscape and understand the impact on their organisations. This data also fuels NETSCOUT’s ATLAS Intelligence Feed (AIF) which continuously arms NETSCOUT’s Omnis and Arbor security portfolio. Together with AIF, the Omnis and Arbor products automatically detect and block threat activity for enterprises and service providers worldwide.
Visit our interactive website*** for more information on NETSCOUT’s semi-annual DDoS Threat Intelligence Report. You can also find us on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter for threat updates and the latest trends and insights.