Arbor Networks have collaborated with Google Ideas to create a data visualisation that maps global distributed denial of service attacks.
As experts of DDoS and advanced threat protection solutions, Arbor have teamed up with Google Ideas’ think/do take to explore how technology can enable people to confront threats in the face of conflict, instability or repression.
Google Ideas used anonymous data from Arbor Networks’ ATLAS global threat monitoring system to build a data visualisation that allows users to explore historical trends in DDoS attacks, and make the connection to related news events on any given day. The data is updated daily, and historical data can be viewed for all countries.
The Digital Attack Map was introduced today at the ‘Conflict in a Connected World’ summit, hosted by Google Ideas, in partnership with the Council on Foreign Relations and the Gen Next Foundation. The summit brings together experts, technologists and people with relevant experience from across a wide range of disciplines and backgrounds to address how technology can play a role in exploring trends, exposing threats and empowering people in conflict.
When Arbor Networks first began working with leading network operators in 2000, flood attacks were in the 400Mb/sec range. Today, they regularly exceed 100Gb/sec. The sheer size of the attacks is not all that has changed.
Beginning in 2010, and driven in no small part by the rise of Hacktivism, has seen a renaissance in DDoS attacks that has led to innovation in the areas of tools, targets and techniques. Today, DDoS is a complex threat that mixes flood, application and infrastructure attacks in a single, blended attack.
"The people at Google Ideas have really done an amazing job bringing Arbor’s global DDoS attack data to life," said Arbor Networks president Colin Doherty. "The goal of this collaboration was to show what a global threat DDoS is and how DDoS can be used to suppress speech and threaten open access to information."