grc.com off the net.
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@Dashrender said:
Very few sites pay to prevent themselves from being DDOS'ed at 13 Gb.Most do, actually.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Very few sites pay to prevent themselves from being DDOS'ed at 13 Gb.Most do, actually.
Most, meaning more than 50%?
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Very few sites pay to prevent themselves from being DDOS'ed at 13 Gb.Most do, actually.
Most, meaning more than 50%?
Assuming business sites rather than like random personal blogs and stuff, yes. Business sites, at least "real" ones not including the free site for the diner on the corner, have some degree of DDOS protection. Even my dad's prayer group website does. And it's just for six guys scheduling breakfast.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Very few sites pay to prevent themselves from being DDOS'ed at 13 Gb.Most do, actually.
Most, meaning more than 50%?
Assuming business sites rather than like random personal blogs and stuff, yes. Business sites, at least "real" ones not including the free site for the diner on the corner, have some degree of DDOS protection. Even my dad's prayer group website does. And it's just for six guys scheduling breakfast.
Sure, but he also is either an IT pro or has you directing them to use the free service of CF.
I'll agree most, probably over 75% of larger businesses are using something like CF for at least a little protection.
But I really wonder if CF give protection against 13Gb attacks to a free customer?
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@Dashrender said:
But I really wonder if CF give protection against 13Gb attacks to a free customer?
Of course they do. They don't work for him, he's a special case. But as a general case, he would have been totally protected here.
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@Dashrender said:
I'll agree most, probably over 75% of larger businesses are using something like CF for at least a little protection.
It's quite a lot. I've worked with them during some massive government-backed attacks and nothing stops places like China bringing you down, but CF does some impressive stuff.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
But I really wonder if CF give protection against 13Gb attacks to a free customer?
Of course they do. They don't work for him, he's a special case. But as a general case, he would have been totally protected here.
Yeah as I wrote that I was wondering more if the protection would be provided not because they are a paying/non paying customer, but because of the architecture.
Assuming that all 1 Pb+ bandwidth that CF has isn't being trashed, they are probably just protecting everyone equally.
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@Dashrender said:
Assuming that all 1 Pb+ bandwidth that CF has isn't being trashed, they are probably just protecting everyone equally.
Sort of, but that isn't how it works. They have DDoS detection and they go to work trying to mitigate when it kicks on. What is and isn't a DDoS is rarely clear and fending one off always involves coordinating everyone involved.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Steve specifically mentioned CloudFlare during his podcast and made mention that he didn't think it would work for him.
What kind of site is he running? ML cant work behind it because of Websockets. Is his site a blog or what?
This is completely not true. You can use Websockets with CloudFlare, you just have to pay for it. It has been that way since August of 2014.
Your statement is a complete lie.
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@JaredBusch said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Steve specifically mentioned CloudFlare during his podcast and made mention that he didn't think it would work for him.
What kind of site is he running? ML cant work behind it because of Websockets. Is his site a blog or what?
This is completely not true. You can use Websockets with CloudFlare, you just have to pay for it. It has been that way since August of 2014.
Your statement is a complete lie.
Okay yes, with the enterprise level support which is $11K a month, I've been told, then CF will do this.