Friday, October 21, 2016

Coastal North Carolina is not effected.

The net has been fine all day. Dyn needs to set up a 'felt quake' reporting by telephone. But, it might take a land line phone.

This type of attack may be carrying really lousey additions to the computer net in the USA. Not so much a virus, but, an agenda of adding software undetected to sabotage in the future.


I don't believe this is a one time issue. I think there will be an infrastructure installed with each wave of attack that carries with it future rendering of the USA helpless.

This is a government attack and I know of only one government with global reach of it's freight infrastructure.

The downloaded infrastructure is probably equipped to be a crawler when called up.

October 21, 2016
By Eli Blumenthal and Elizabeth Weise

...Effects felt nationwide (click here)

Dyn first reported issues at around 11:10 a.m. UTC, or roughly 7:10 a.m. ET, posting on its website that it "began monitoring and mitigating a DDoS attack against our Dyn Managed DNS infrastructure."

In an update posted at 8:45 a.m. ET, the company confirmed the attack, noting that "this attack is mainly impacting US East and is impacting Managed DNS customers in this region. Our Engineers are continuing to work on mitigating this issue."

By 2:52 p.m. ET, Dyn posted that the service monitoring issues had been resolved and that its engineers continued to investigate and mitigate the attacks on its infrastructure.

Amazon, whose web service AWS hosts many of the web's popular destinations including Netflix, also reported East Coast issues around the same time. In an update posted at 9:36 a.m. ET it said that it had "been resolved and the service is operating normally."...