News
        
        Hackers Attack Key Net Traffic Computers
        Hackers briefly overwhelmed at least three of the 13 computers that help manage global computer traffic Tuesday.
        
        
			- By The Associated Press
 - February 06, 2007
 
		
        (Washington)      Hackers briefly overwhelmed at least three of the 13   computers that help manage global computer traffic Tuesday in one of the most   significant attacks against the Internet since 2002.
    
      Experts said the   unusually powerful attacks lasted for hours but passed largely unnoticed by most   computer users, a testament to the resiliency of the Internet. Behind the   scenes, computer scientists worldwide raced to cope with enormous volumes of   data that threatened to saturate some of the Internet's most vital   pipelines.
        
      Experts said the hackers appeared to disguise their origin,   but vast amounts of rogue data in the attacks were traced to South   Korea.
        
      The attacks appeared to target UltraDNS, the company that operates   servers managing traffic for Web sites ending in "org" and some other suffixes,   experts said. Company officials did not immediately return telephone calls from   The Associated Press.
        
      Among the targeted "root" servers that manage   global Internet traffic were ones operated by the Defense Department and the   Internet's primary oversight body.
        
      "There was what appears to be some   form of attack during the night hours here in California and into the morning,"   said John Crain, chief technical officer for the Internet Corporation for   Assigned Names and Numbers. He said the attack was continuing and so was the   hunt for its origin.
        
      "I don't think anybody has the full picture," Crain   said. "We're looking at the data."
        
      Crain said Tuesday's attack was less   serious than attacks against the same 13 "root" servers in October 2002 because   technology innovations in recent years have increasingly distributed their   workloads to other computers around the globe.
      
        
      AP Internet   Writer Anick Jesdanun contributed to this story from New York.