A Distributed Denial of Service, or in short, a DDoS are attacks that create an overflow of traffic on your online platform. As a result, the attacked platform can be (temporarily) unavailable. DDoS attacks are initiated from various locations around the world and can be started very easily. The chance of being caught for cyber criminals is small, which makes it tempating to perform such attacks.

Attacks are started from different angles: for example, a conflict situation, political sensitivity or to show the vulnerability of a website.
DDoS attacks have evolved into three different stages:
But what are the risks of such an attack nowadays, and what does it exactly mean? When a DDoS attack is executed, it is possible that your online platform is unreachable. So, you must ask yourself what the consequences are, think for example of:
Good to know: the most common attacks are not intended to harm a specific company. Most attacks occur after discovering a vulnerability. Scanners of cyber criminals use automated bots and websites that randomly search websites and are constantly looking for vulnerabilities.
Fact: 86% of websites and web applications have at least one vulnerability. The chance of a DDoS attack on your online platform is considerable.
Only 2% of organizations report that their web applications have not been compromised in the past 12 months, 89% said they did. (Source: The Cost of Web Application Attacks, Ponemon Institute, 2015.)
It is important to take the right technical measures to protect your digital platform against attacks. Invest in a good Web Application Firewall (WAF). We have extensive experience with protecting online platforms, in collaboration with Akamai. Learn more about this topic? Check our dedicated Performance Cloud website or contact our consultant Hosting & Security Bas Greevink.
Published on: January 31, 2018
Author: Bas Greevink