SCO Site Slammed By DDoS Attack

open source software

No suspects have been identified in the Internet-based assault that began at 4:20 a.m. MST. The Lindon, Utah, company's web site remained unavailable as of 6 p.m. MST.

Besides its web site, the attack brought down the SCO's e-mail system, corporate intranet and customer support operations, the company said.

"SCO is working with law enforcement officials and gathering information through mechanisms that we have in place to help us identify the origin of these attacks," company spokesman Blake Stowell said in a statement. "We deplore these activities by those who try to intimidate or harass legitimate businesses through cyber terrorist tactics while hiding their true identity."

The specific type of distributed denial of service attack, called a "syn attack," was caused by someone commandeering several thousand servers and having them overload SCO's site with illegitimate web site requests. The flood of traffic caused the company's Internet bandwidth to be consumed, making the site inaccessible to legitimate visitors.

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SCO, which claims to hold the copyright to the Unix operating system, has filed a $3 billion lawsuit against IBM, claiming the company violated its license with SCO by inserting some of its copyrighted code into Linux, the open-source operating system. SCO has also threatened legal action against companies refusing to pay royalties for the use of Linux, and has challenged in court the legality of the general public license governing the use of Linux.

This story courtesy of TechWeb.