Posted on Tuesday, November 11th, 2008 | Bookmark on del.icio.us

2008 Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report

by Craig Labovitz

Growing financial pressures, unforeseen threats, and a volatile and rapidly changing business landscape — apt descriptions for both the world economy and this years Worldwide Infrastructure Security Survey.

Arbor Networks once again has completed a survey of the largest ISPs and content providers around the world. Some 70 lead security engineers responded to 90 questions covering a spectrum of Internet backbone security threats and engineering challenges. This fourth annual survey covered the 12-month period from August 2007 through July 2008.

A copy of the full report is available at http://www.arbornetworks.com/report

The most significant findings:

  • ISPs Fight New Battles
    In the last four surveys, ISPs reportedly spent most of their available security resources combating distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks. For the first time, this year ISPs describe a far more diversified range of threats, including concerns over domain name system (DNS) spoofing, border gateway protocol (BGP) hijacking and spam. Almost half of the surveyed ISPs now consider their DNS services vulnerable. Others expressed concern over related service delivery infrastructure, including voice over IP (VoIP) session border controllers (SBCs) and load balancers.
  • Attacks Now Exceed 40 Gigabits
    From relatively humble megabit beginnings in 2000, the largest DDoS attacks have now grown a hundredfold to break the 40 gigabit barrier this year. The growth in attack size continues to significantly outpace the corresponding increase in underlying transmission speed and ISP infrastructure investment. The below graph shows the yearly reported maximum attack size.
  • Services Under Threat
    Over half of the surveyed providers reported growth in sophisticated service-level attacks at moderate and low bandwidth levels attacks specifically designed to exploit knowledge of service weakness like vulnerable and expensive back-end queries and computational resource limitations. Several ISPs reported prolonged (multi-hour) outages of prominent Internet services during the last year due to application-level attacks.
  • Fighting Back
    The majority of ISPs now report that they can detect DDoS attacks using commercial or open source tools. This year also shows significant adoption of inline mitigation infrastructure and a migration away from less discriminate techniques like blocking all customer traffic (including legitimate traffic) via routing announcements. Many ISPs also report deploying walled-garden and quarantine infrastructure to combat botnets.

Overall, ISP optimism about security issues reported in previous surveys has been replaced by growing concern over the new threats and budget pressures. ISPs say they are increasingly deploying more complex distributed VoIP, video and IP services that often poorly prepared to deal with the new Internet security threats. More than half of the surveyed ISPs believe serious security threats will increase in the next year while their security groups make do with “fewer resources, less management support and increased workload.”

ISPs were also unhappy with their vendors and the security community. Most believe that the DNS cache poisoning flaw disclosed earlier this year was poorly handled and increased the danger of the threat.

Finally, the surveyed ISPs also said their vendor infrastructure equipment continues to lack key security features (like capacity for large ACL lists) and suffers from poor configuration management and a near complete absence of IPv6 security features. While most ISPs now have the infrastructure to detect bandwidth flood attacks, many still lack the ability to rapidly mitigate these attacks. Only a fraction of surveyed ISPs said they have the capability to mitigate DDoS attacks in 10 minutes or less. Even fewer providers have the infrastructure to defend against service-level attacks or this year’s reported peak of a 40 gigabit flood attack.

As always, this work would not be possible without the support and participation of the Internet security community. The 2008-2009 survey will be released next Fall.

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Comment Post by: Zero Day mobile edition — November 11th, 2008 @ 3:22 pm EST  Reply

[...] “Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report” report by Arbor Networks also indicates that the DDoS attack rates exceed the ISP network’s growth, and have already reached the 40GB barrier. Ironically, the report also states that managed DDoS [...]

Comment Post by: networkreading.com » Arbor : 2008 Internet Security Report — November 11th, 2008 @ 4:23 pm EST  Reply

[...] 2008 Internet Security Report | Security to the Core | Arbor Networks Security Blogged with the Flock Browser [...]

Comment Post by: Some DDoS attacked now exceeding 40GBPS! | — November 11th, 2008 @ 7:09 pm EST  Reply

[...] are a few alarming facts in a new report from Arbor Networks. Hacking attacks have been far from amusing for some time now. The band width now consumed by some [...]

Comment Post by: ISPs Fear Monster 40Gbps DDoS Attacks - Attacks getting more sophisticated, while resources getting strained… | Voip Blog — November 11th, 2008 @ 9:11 pm EST  Reply

[...] readers write in to note that Arbor Networks has released their 2008 Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report, which picks the brains of roughly seventy engineers from tier 1 and 2 ISPs. Engineers were asked [...]

Comment Post by: » Study: DDoS attacks threaten ISP infrastructure « Poncheg.com - State & Community News Blog — November 11th, 2008 @ 9:15 pm EST  Reply

[...] fourth edition of the Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report, released Tuesday, was based on how 70 lead security engineers responded to 90 questions. As in the [...]

Comment Post by: technichristian.net » Blog Archive » 2008 Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report — November 12th, 2008 @ 12:09 am EST  Reply

[...] Now Exceed 40 Gigabits From relatively humble megabit beginnings in 2000, the largest DDoS attacks have now grown a hundred…. Write a [...]

Comment Post by: mark — November 12th, 2008 @ 1:59 am EST  Reply

the rss feed drives my av nuts and reports BV:Qhost-D
what up with that.

Comment Post by: Liquidmatrix Security Digest » Security Briefings - November 12th — November 12th, 2008 @ 9:48 am EST  Reply

[...] 2008 Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report – Arbor Networks [...]

Comment Post by: Can your ISP stop a 40 Gigabit DDoS Attack? | Linux System Admins Blog — November 12th, 2008 @ 4:33 pm EST  Reply

[...] 2008 Internet Security Report put out by Arbor Networks has this eye popping blurb… Attacks Now Exceed 40 Gigabits [...]

Comment Post by: ISPs Fear Monster 40Gbps DDoS Attacks - Attacks getting more sophisticated, while resources getting strained… | remove the labels | Gadgets and Life — November 12th, 2008 @ 7:59 pm EST  Reply

[...] readers write in to note that Arbor Networks has released their 2008 Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report, which picks the brains of roughly seventy engineers from tier 1 and 2 ISPs. Engineers were asked [...]

Comment Post by: Internet ameaçada « Ciência, Tecnologia e Afins… — November 14th, 2008 @ 5:49 am EST  Reply

[...] praticamente o dobro do volume de ataques registrados no ano anterior, segundo a quarta edição do Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report, da Arbor [...]

Comment Post by: intir.net » Blog Archive » DDoS Attacks Getting More Powerful, ISPs Report Concern Over New Threats and Budget Pressures — November 14th, 2008 @ 8:34 pm EST  Reply

[...] Fourth Annual Worldwide Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report (Arbor Netowrks, 11/11/2008) 2008 Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report (Arbor Security Blog, 11/11/2008) Copy of the Full Report (Free Registration Required) [...]

Comment Post by: SPAM drops, DDoS Attacks, Whitepapers « InfoSec Philippines — November 14th, 2008 @ 8:54 pm EST  Reply

[...] ISPs are allocating resources for DDoS attacks according to Arbor Network’s 2008 Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report. A related article is on ZDNet and an article on Vunet talks about ISP’s fear on IPv6 [...]

Comment Post by: Riflessioni su DDOS e reti complesse « esperimento tre — November 17th, 2008 @ 7:23 am EST  Reply

[...] Novembre 2008 · Nessun Commento Del 2008 Worldwide Infrastructure Security report se ne è parlato brevemente su Repubblica (in questo articolo), ma è stato abbastanza ignorato. Il [...]

Comment Post by: On Message with Ben Gross » Blog Archive » New and noteworthy in security 11/26/08 — November 26th, 2008 @ 10:01 pm EST  Reply

[...] 2008 Internet Security Report: Arbor Networks Security 2008 Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report is summarized in a post in their Security to the Core blog. The full report synthesizes data from a survey of about 70 lead security engineers and includes descriptions of new threats such as DDoS attacks that exceed 40 gigabits a second and new DNS attacks. [...]

Comment Post by: CloudShield Blog » Blog Archive » GoDaddy Goes Down — January 26th, 2009 @ 5:11 pm EST  Reply

[...] on DDoS trends published in late 2008, large scale attacks of 40Gbps or more are being seen. (Link To Arbor Report) Most hosting providers are not able to accommodate such levels of attack and this seems to be [...]

Comment Post by: Internet: quanto è vulnerabile la Rete? - Stalkk.ed — February 16th, 2009 @ 5:11 pm EST  Reply

[...] quanto riguarda gli attacchi di tipo DDoS, ad esempio, il "2008 Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report" di Arbor Networks evidenzia la mostruosa crescita in Gigabits per secondo (Gbps) della banda [...]

Comment Post by: SEC401.2 参考リンク集 « Security 401 Weblog — July 16th, 2009 @ 12:15 am EST  Reply
Comment Post by: Amazon Web Services: It's Not The Size Of the Ship, But Rather The Motion Of the... | Rational Survivability — October 16th, 2009 @ 3:23 pm EST  Reply

[...] and infinite scale is that you get the benefits of infinite FAIL” The largest DDOS attacks now exceed 40Gbps. DeSantis wouldn’t say what AWS’s bandwidth ceiling was but indicated that a shrewd guesser [...]

Comment Post by: Amazon Sends Wikileaks Up In A Cloud « Information — December 1st, 2010 @ 11:03 pm EST  Reply

[...] That’s relatively small, as DDOS attacks go; they often exceeded 40 Gbits/sec in 2008, according to Arbor Networks’ 2008 worldwide infrastructure report. [...]

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