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Neat. Should be a scrolling screensaver.
__________________________________________________________________ Cross-platform electronic bound book (original thread). PGP public key. «nolite confidere in principibus, in filiis hominum quibus non est salus» |
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That is totally AWESOME
From the site: Every second, Norse collects and analyzes live threat intelligence from darknets in hundreds of locations in over 40 countries. The attacks shown are based on a small subset of live flows against the Norse honeypot infrastructure, representing actual worldwide cyber attacks by bad actors. At a glance, one can see which countries are aggressors or targets at the moment, using which type of attacks (services-ports). |
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Pretty cool. Gonna make this static on one of my monitors until I get bored with it. It does have a certain "wow" factor! I may display it on one of mine, too. I bet it gets more attention then the hours invested in policy documents or time spent poring over logs and scan results. |
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question - why no attacks on China? do they have a good firewall? No point in stealing what they stole from the US? also theres a crazy ass burst of hundreds of attacks from china every few mins, whats that about? What do the Chinese have that we want? You can't hack crates of rubber dog crap
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Too confusing compared to the other one, but cool nonetheless. |
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Quoted:
Neat. Should be a scrolling screensaver. __________________________________________________________________ Cross-platform electronic bound book (original thread). PGP public key. «nolite confidere in principibus, in filiis hominum quibus non est salus» Shilling post.... |
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Quoted: Refresh the page if all you see is the attacker/attacked boxes. The map will reload once refreshed. Thailand is getting hit again. Quoted: Quoted: It's not doing anything. Refresh the page if all you see is the attacker/attacked boxes. The map will reload once refreshed. Thailand is getting hit again. Yeah, Austrailia is hitting them so hard that even James Brown would feel emasculated. Keep up the good work Aussies! |
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So... What exactly makes up an attack, and how do these guys know that an attack is happening? I'm no expert by any means, but server-traffic patterns, IP addresses, data-request packets, and target-ports are monitored. Think of a highway toll both system that collects through-put data; if a quiet, backwater booth reports a sudden surge of 20,000 red vans heading for the nearest city, then something is assumed to be up. The map is misleading, as the actual attackers are just using the networks shown to stage attacks. A hacker in Finland may be controlling the server in China, which then attacks the US. |



