The 4chan message board, a popular
discussion forum for the so-called Anonymous activist group that
launched a multitude of Denial of Service attacks in retribution for
efforts to cut off technical and financial support for WikiLeaks, was
itself shut down by a DoS counterattack on Dec. 28
The site’s founder, Christopher Poole, posted
the message on the site’s main page at 2:39 in the morning. “Site is
down due to DDoS. We now join the ranks of MasterCard, Visa, PayPal, et
al.—an exclusive club!” according to the message.
As of today, the “current status” tool on the
site reports all parts of the site as being up, and posts on various
4chan online forums confirm that the boards are back to normal.
However, during the course of the attack, the 4chan message boards were
the hardest hit, Paul Mutton, a security analyst at Netcraft, told BBC.
"For most of the past 24 hours, the site has
either been very slow to respond or has been completely unreachable,"
said Mutton.
The boards contain 99 percent of the site’s
content, according to 4chan. The boards at the moment are full of link
spam, but on a free-wheeling forum like this, that can mean practically
anything.
At the moment, it is still unknown who
orchestrated the attack against the site, which had been behind such
pranks as hacking into Sarah Palin’s Yahoo account and DoS attacks against various commercial sites. Many members who frequent the boards call themselves Anonymous and were behind the attacks that took down MasterCard and Visa’s Web sites as well as PayPal’s blog earlier this month.
The FBI has been investigating 4chan for their
involvement with various DDOS attacks, such as the one that hit the
United States Copyright Office, CNET reported in November.
The most likely culprit, a hacktivist who goes
by the name Jester, denied on Twitter that he was behind the attacks,
“4chan.org - that looks like a TANGO DOWN (not) maybe you guys pissed
off the wrong person trying to (wrongly) ID me?” Members of Anonymous
had previously said they were going to unmask and then target Jester
for his first attack on WikiLeaks just before it released secret U.S.
diplomatic cables.
While the large-scale Web attack may be in
retaliation for its affiliation with Anonmyous and Operation Payback,
this is not the first time 4chan has been hit by an online attack. Over
the years, the site has been hit by a number of DDOS attacks but it has
rebounded each time.
In February, Verizon blocked access to parts of
4chan. According to a status post by Poole, the site had been under a
type of DOS attack which specifically targeted the message boards. The
attack made it seem like 4chan was performing some kind of an attack of
its own, and Verizon blocked all traffic in an “inappropriate,
heavy-handed response,” despite there being “no threat to their
customers” or network, Poole wrote. Last year AT&T also blocked 4chan briefly for the same reason, according to Poole.
The irony of 4chan being hit by a DDOS was not
lost on some of its members. 4chan’s official Twitter account said, “We
figured @MasterCard @PayPal #Visa were lonely.”