The record-setting DDoSes keep coming, with no end in sight

As DDoSes continue to innovate, their attacks grow ever bigger.

Ones and zeros appear to float in the water next to a drowning man.

Enlarge / Drowning in a sea of data. (credit: Getty Images)

The record-vying distributed denial-of-service attacks keep coming, with two mitigation services reporting they encountered some of the biggest data bombardments ever by threat actors whose tactics and techniques are constantly evolving.

On Monday, Imperva said it defended a customer against an attack that lasted more than four hours and peaked at more than 3.9 million requests per second (RPS).

(credit: Imperva)

In all, the attackers directed 25.3 billion requests at the target with an average rate of 1.8 million RPS. While DDoSes exceeding 1 million RPS are growing increasingly common, they typically come in shorter bursts that measure in seconds or a few minutes at most.

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Teen Sued By Bungie Over Cheats & Threats Comes Out Fighting

During the summer Bungie sued a Destiny 2 cheater who allegedly evaded multiple bans and harassed Bungie’s staff. The developer’s claims include copyright infringement, but nothing in its complaint is going unchallenged. It transpires that Bungie’s target is a teenager, one that in typical fashion has an answer for everything, with help from his lawyer, of course.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Destiny 2This July at a Washington district court, Destiny 2 developer Bungie filed the latest in a growing list of lawsuits aimed at curtailing cheating in its online games.

Bungie’s complaint alleged that the user behind the Twitter handle ‘@inkcel‘ regularly live streamed himself using third party copyright-violating cheats in Destiny 2 that give cheaters an unfair advantage over regular players.

Bungie had plenty of other complaints too.

@inkcel had been caught cheating in Destiny 2 and had been banned from the service multiple times. Every time he signed back up he breached Bungie’s Limited Software License Agreement (LSLA), Bungie said. Acts of fraud according to the lawsuit.

The Destiny 2 player also stood accused of selling Bungie emblems (a type of digital art) on third-party platforms, including pieces associated with Bungie’s charity work, again in breach of the LSLA. It was also claimed he harassed Bungie staff online, with some communications perceived as a threat to their physical safety.

Court Moves to Shield Defendant’s Identity

On July 25, 2022, ten days after the lawsuit was filed, @inkcel’s attorney advised the court that his client is in fact a minor child. Soon after the teenager’s real name stopped being used in the case, replaced by the initials L.L. instead. In a recent Twitter post, L.L. revealed that he’s just 17 years old but that doesn’t appear to affected Bungie’s position on the lawsuit.

L.L. was served in late July and after being granted extra time to respond, this week his attorney filed a motion to dismiss. As these filings go, it’s quite an entertaining read and could complicate Bungie’s plans, in more ways than one.

Defendants Fight Back With Same Lawyer

A separate lawsuit filed by Bungie against cheat seller AimJunkies took an unexpected turn recently when the defendants aggressively countersued the game developer. The attorney coordinating that attack, Philip P. Mann of Mann Law Group PLLC, is also representing L.L. in his case against Bungie. He’s pulling no punches.

“This is another in a series of ill-considered, unfounded lawsuits filed by Bungie, Inc., in a well-publicized campaign ‘to put cheaters and those who assist them on notice that Bungie does not and will not tolerate cheating in Destiny 2’,” Mann writes in his motion to dismiss.

“Regardless of what Bungie ‘tolerates’ when it comes to the actions of others, formal legal proceedings, such as this case, are governed by the law, not Bungie’s desires.”

In short, the defense believes that Bungie’s complaint focused a bit too much on conveying the dramas of potential violence, arson, and other criminal conduct, at the expense of pleading plausible facts sufficient to support its alleged causes of action and entitlement to relief. As a result, the complaint should be dismissed.

Defendant’s Destiny 2 Custom Loadout

Mann begins by describing L.L. as a fan of Destiny 2 and the skills required to advance through the popular game. Some players are more skilled than others, so they progress through the game more quickly. Some even use ancillary software to gain a competitive edge.

Bungie calls this ‘cheat software” and according to Mann, the company has been trying to “shoehorn” its use into a recognized cause of action, such as copyright infringement and/or breach of contract. This is because there is no law against cheating and there’s no law against obtaining and using cheat software either, Mann says.

“In this action, Bungie vilifies and attacks Defendant L.L. for using one of several available suites of ‘cheat software’ while playing Destiny 2 and making no secret of the fact. Bungie tries to shoehorn the legal actions of Defendant L.L. into inapposite legal theories where they do not fit and do not belong.”

In short, Bungie’s complaint is “hysterical” and L.L. did nothing unlawful.

Minor Defendant Behaving Badly

Bungie’s complaint goes into a lot of detail about L.L.’s alleged bad behavior but according to the motion to dismiss – so what? The important thing is that none of the alleged acts violated any of Bungie’s rights under the law.

“Bungie’s claims amount to little more than that L.L. has publicly made fun of Bungie and has made fun of Bungie’s apparently ineffective efforts to combat ‘cheating in Destiny 2,’ an ‘offense’ that Congress has not, at present, chosen to make unlawful,” the motion adds.

So what about creating Destiny 2 accounts under the names HoeAnnihilator and Hoehitter? Evading bans? Streaming some cheating action on Twitch? Also not illegal, Mann says. Anyway, Bungie closed the new accounts down quickly, so no harm done. Comments about Bungie and arson? An obvious juvenile joke, free speech under the First Amendment, the motion adds.

Surely the alleged re-selling of Bungie digital emblems is a problem? According to his attorney, L.L. paid full price for them and while resale could potentially run counter to Bungie’s licensing terms, in this case, Bungie’s paperwork doesn’t mean a whole lot.

As a minor, L.L. has the right to disaffirm any contract within a reasonable time of becoming an adult but has already taken the opportunity to declare contracts with Bungie null and void. Since that includes the LSLA, three of Bungie’s causes of action must be dismissed.

Copyright Infringement? No, Defense Insists

Citing a case involving a World of Warcraft cheat called ‘Glider’ decided by the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, Mann says that the use of ancillary software to achieve an advantage in playing a computer game is not a violation of copyright law.

Blizzard Entertainment argued that by distributing Glider, the defendants were liable for “secondary” or “induced” copyright infringement. When players used Glider, Blizzard claimed that they violated the terms of the software license and that amounted to copyright infringement. The Ninth Circuit disagreed and said that any claim would need to be pursued under contract law.

That leaves Bungie’s claim that L.L. violated the DMCA by circumventing the technological measures that reportedly protect Bungie’s anti-cheat software. The motion to dismiss says that Bungie doesn’t claim that L.L. avoided, bypassed, removed or impaired a technological measure. Instead it claims to be able to detect suspicious activity using client software, an important fact, the attorney writes.

“It means that the data Bungie claims to obfuscate is actually resident on L.L.’s own computer, not on any Bungie server,” Mann writes.

“When using ‘cheat’ software, users are simply accessing data that is in their own computers, which they own and which they are perfectly free to examine and see what files, data, programs, etc., are on their own computers.”

L.L’s motion to dismiss Bungie’s complaint is available here (pdf)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Daily Deals (9-21-2022)

Woot is running a sale on refurbished iPads, iMacs, and MacBooks, letting you pick up a previous-gen iPad mini for as little as $270 or are some older iPads for even less. Meanwhile eBay is running 15% off sale on over 2-thousand refurbished products,…

Woot is running a sale on refurbished iPads, iMacs, and MacBooks, letting you pick up a previous-gen iPad mini for as little as $270 or are some older iPads for even less. Meanwhile eBay is running 15% off sale on over 2-thousand refurbished products, with savings up to $100 when you use the coupon SAVE15REFURB. […]

The post Daily Deals (9-21-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

iPhone 14 and 14 Pro review: A picture is worth a thousand dollars

These updates are iterative as ever, but the cameras and Dynamic Island shine.

Whether we’re talking about the iPhone 14, the iPhone 14 Pro, or the iPhone 14 Pro Max, this year’s update focuses on the cameras.

Yes, the Pro models have always-on displays and an oh-so-very-Apple approach to replacing the controversial screen notch. But as nifty as those perks are, they shouldn’t be the reasons you buy these phones.

The cameras are now so prominent—in the Pro models especially—that it’s starting to feel like we should call these devices "smartcameras" rather than smartphones.

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Logitech G Cloud is a handheld console built for game streaming (ships October 18)

The Logitech G Cloud is a handheld gaming device with the specs of a mid-range smartphone, which might seem odd at a time when phones made for gaming tend to be stuffed to the gills with premium specs. But it makes sense when you realize that the Logi…

The Logitech G Cloud is a handheld gaming device with the specs of a mid-range smartphone, which might seem odd at a time when phones made for gaming tend to be stuffed to the gills with premium specs. But it makes sense when you realize that the Logitech G Cloud is designed to be an affordable […]

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Tassei Stream Card brings wireless PC game streaming to the Nintendo Switch (eventually)

There are plenty of different ways to stream the game library on your PC to a, tablet or console. You may soon be able to do the same thing with your Nintendo Switch, thanks to the Tassei Stream Card. The Stream Card installs in the Switch’s gam…

Tassei Stream card wireless PC gaming on Switch

There are plenty of different ways to stream the game library on your PC to a, tablet or console. You may soon be able to do the same thing with your Nintendo Switch, thanks to the Tassei Stream Card. The Stream Card installs in the Switch’s game card slot and adds support for game streaming […]

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Today’s best deals: Apple MacBook Air, Ring Fit Adventure, and more

Dealmaster also has Anker charging gear, Google’s Nest Hub, and portable SSDs.

Today’s best deals: Apple MacBook Air, Ring Fit Adventure, and more

Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

It's Wednesday, which means it's time for another Dealmaster. Our latest roundup of the best tech deals from around the web includes a solid price for Apple's M1-based MacBook Air, the entry-level version of which is currently down to $850 at Amazon. You should see a notice of an extra $100 off on Amazon's listing page, with the full discount applied in your cart.

Outside of a couple brief drops to $800 last year, this is the lowest price we've tracked for this notebook version—which includes a basic 8GB of RAM and 256GB of SSD storage—from a major retailer. The deal comes out to $149 less than Apple's MSRP and roughly $90 lower than the average street price we've seen online in recent months.

Note that this deal applies to the MacBook Air that launched in 2020 and runs on Apple's M1 chip, not the model that arrived earlier this year with a revamped design and faster M2 SoC. We generally recommend the latter to most people in the market for a new MacBook today, as it offers a moderate performance boost (largely on the graphics side of things), a brighter screen with a bit more real estate (albeit with a "notched" design), a MagSafe connector, and a much nicer camera and audio system for video calls. The entry-level version of that notebook is also on sale today for $1,099, which is $100 off Apple's MSRP.

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Razer’s new soundbar works with USB-C and Bluetooth, costs $100

Up to 90 dB volume output, Razer claims.

Razer Leviathan V2 X

Enlarge / Razer's Leviathan V2 X PC soundbar. (credit: Razer)

Razer on Tuesday announced a soundbar that it claims is fit for movies, music, and gaming while being able to connect to computers, iPhones, and Android phones. Measuring 15.7 inches (400 mm) long, the Leviathan V2 X is meant to slide under desktop monitors and is a cheaper, less powerful version of Razer's $250 Leviathan V2, which includes a soundbar and subwoofer.

According to Razer, the Leviathan V2 X can reach 90 dB from a distance of 3.3 feet (1 meter). The gaming peripherals and PC maker also claims a frequency response of 85-20,000 Hz, which is a bit high on the low end. In comparison, the pricier Leviathan V2, which includes full-range, tweeter, and passive radiator drivers, plus a subwoofer and THX Spatial Audio, claims 45-20,000 Hz.

The new Leviathan V2 X isn't built for as robust audio as its sibling but includes two full-range racetrack drivers measuring 2 x 2.0 x 4.0 inches (2 x 48 x 95 mm) and a pair of passive radiators measuring 2 x 2.0 x 4.1 inches (2 x 48 x 105 mm).

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