Tag Archives: hit

Mēris Botnet Hit Russia’s Yandex With Massive 22 Million RPS DDoS Attack

Mēris Botnet Hit Russia’s Yandex With Massive 22 Million RPS DDoS Attack

Russian internet giant Yandex has been the target of a record-breaking distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack by a new botnet called Mēris. The botnet is believed to have pummeled the company’s web infrastructure with millions of HTTP requests, before hitting a peak of 21.8 million requests per second (RPS), dwarfing a recent botnet-powered attack that came to light last month, bombarding an unnamed Cloudflare customer in the financial industry with 17.2 million RPS. Russian DDoS… Source link

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Russian Internet giant Yandex says it was hit by largest cyberattack in history – Meduza

Russian Internet giant Yandex says it was hit by largest cyberattack in history – Meduza

The Russian Internet giant Yandex says it repelled the largest DDoS (denial-of-service) attack in history. The cyberattack included more than 20 million requests per second (RPS), according to the company’s blog on the website Habr.  The source of the attack was a new botnet, which Yandex named “Meris.” Yandex observed signs of the appearance of the new botnet back in late June. The company estimates that “Meris” consists of between at least 56,000 infected devices, but says the… Source link

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Google and Apple’s app payments business hit by South Korea law

Google and Apple’s app payments business hit by South Korea law

The amended Telecommunications Business Act was approved by the country’s National Assembly on Tuesday, with the backing of President Moon Jae-in’s party. It will become law once President Moon signs it. Under the new law, developers will be able to select which payment systems to use to process in-app purchases, meaning they may be able to bypass hefty charges imposed by the two longtime leaders. Apple’s commissions, for example, go as high as 30% on some purchases made through the… Source link

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Google, Apple Hit in South Korea by World’s First Law Ending Their Dominance Over App-Store Payments

Google, Apple Hit in South Korea by World’s First Law Ending Their Dominance Over App-Store Payments

SEOUL—Google and Apple Inc. will have to open their app stores to alternative payment systems in South Korea, threatening their lucrative commissions on digital sales. A bill passed Tuesday by South Korea’s National Assembly is the first in the world to dent the tech giants’ dominance over how apps on their platforms sell their digital goods. It will become law once signed by President Moon Jae-in, whose party strongly endorsed the legislation. The law… Source link

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Google Play app store revenue hit $11.2 bln in 2019, lawsuit says

Google Play app store revenue hit .2 bln in 2019, lawsuit says

The logo of Google Play is displayed at Tokyo Game Show 2019 in Chiba, east of Tokyo, Japan, September 12, 2019. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File Photo OAKLAND, Calif., Aug 28 (Reuters) – Alphabet Inc’s (GOOGL.O) Google generated $11.2 billion in revenue from its mobile app store in 2019, according to a court filing unsealed on Saturday, offering a clear view into the service’s financial results for the first time. Attorneys general for Utah and 36 other U.S. states or districts suing Google over… Source link

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‘Gains will be harder to come by’ for US economy hit by Delta variant: Morning Brief

‘Gains will be harder to come by’ for US economy hit by Delta variant: Morning Brief

This article first appeared in the Morning Brief. Get the Morning Brief sent directly to your inbox every Monday to Friday by 6:30 a.m. ET. Subscribe Friday, August 20, 2021 More signs of a summer swoon for economic growth On Thursday morning, we noted that challenges were emerging for the health of the economic expansion, mostly due to the still-raging COVID-19 pandemic.  Those signs continued into the end of this week.  After highlighting that at least two Wall Street firms had either cut or… Source link

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The next Social Security raise may hit a 40-year record. But will it be enough?

The next Social Security raise may hit a 40-year record. But will it be enough?

The next Social Security raise may hit a 40-year record. But will it be enough? Consumer prices soared in June and July at an annual rate of 5.4, the highest since 2008. Steeper prices for gas, food, cars and countless other things are squeezing Americans, especially older ones with fixed, often modest incomes. But there’s a bright side: The spike in inflation could provide seniors next year with their biggest Social Security boost in almost four decades. In fact, advocates just raised their… Source link

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Fast-spreading COVID-19 starts to hit corporate America

Fast-spreading COVID-19 starts to hit corporate America

The stock market continues to ignore worsening headlines on the COVID-19 Delta variant front and climb to fresh records.  But given a shift in tone lately from corporate America, perhaps investors should be on high alert. Companies that had been bullish on the economic recovery from the depths of the pandemic are becoming increasingly cautious as the variant spreads. Here are three household names that have recently warned of a financial impact from the COVID-19 Delta variant. Investors may… Source link

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UPDATE 4-S.Korea’s Krafton, maker of hit game ‘PUBG’, tumbles on debut

UPDATE 4-S.Korea’s Krafton, maker of hit game ‘PUBG’, tumbles on debut

* Shares fall as much as 20% below IPO price * Worries about China crackdown on gaming sector * Worst debut for S.Korean listing since 2004 (Updates with milestone, closing price, market capitalisation, KOSPI ranking, adds analyst comment) By Joyce Lee and Scott Murdoch SEOUL/HONG KONG, Aug 10 (Reuters) – Shares in Krafton Inc , the Tencent Holdings-backed South Korean company behind blockbuster video game “PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds” (PUBG), fell as much as 20% on their trading debut on… Source link

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U.S. new home sales hit 14-month low amid supply constraints

U.S. new home sales hit 14-month low amid supply constraints

By Lucia Mutikani WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Sales of new U.S. single-family homes tumbled to a 14-month low in June and sales in the prior month were weaker than initially estimated, the latest signs that expensive lumber and shortages of other building materials were hurting the housing market. The third straight monthly decline in sales reported by the Commerce Department on Monday followed news last week that permits for future homebuilding dropped to a nine-month low in June while home… Source link

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