Category: Ngaahi ʻohofi Uepi

WaterHole attack

Fuʻifuʻi e ngaahi ʻohofi ʻo: founga ʻoku kau faihia ai ʻa e infiltrate malu infrastructures

My first encounter with the world of cyber-criminals occurred through a watering hole attack campaign many years ago. I visited a Persian website and discovered that it was downloading malware onto visitorsbrowsers. I promptly contacted the site administrator, who informed me that they had no technical knowledge of the issue. It became apparent that
Lau ke lahi ange

credential stuffing

Credential ʻoku ʻikai ko ha Uetosi!

I have heard this many times over the course of the last several years: someone is experiencing a heavy DDoS attack on their website. When I ask them what type of attack they are experiencing, the answer is usually that the bad guys are sending them thousands or even millions of POST requests. When I
Lau ke lahi ange

application ddos attacks

Ko hono fakaʻaongaʻi ʻo e ngaahi ʻohofi ʻa e Uetosi, mo e founga ʻe lava ke fakasiʻisiʻi ange ai

DDoS (distributed denial of service) and DoS (denial of service) attacks can be broadly classified into three categories based on the layers of the OSI model they target: network layer (Layer 3), transport layer (Layer 4), and application layer (Layer 7). Layer 3 and Layer 4 attacks are typically less complexeven though that they might
Lau ke lahi ange