Eyes Turn to China As Internet Woes Continue

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
45,698
1
0
Eyes Turn to China As Internet Woes Continue


Amazon Web Services continues to struggle with technical issues that have left several prominent websites inaccessible and may have some connection to "cyber-attacks" originating from China against one of its clients.

Trouble erupted at several major websites on April 21 when an Amazon data center suffered a "glitch" that knocked out its web hosting service. Several prominent sites including Hootsuite [http://www.reddit.com/], all of which use Amazon Web Services, suffered outages as a result and are continuing to struggle with various difficulties today. A message currently up on Reddit states that the site is in "emergency mode" while Amazon tries to get things sorted out, although there is no ETA at this time.

The latest status update [http://status.aws.amazon.com/] on the situation, posted at 11:49 am EDT, states, "We continue to see progress in recovering volumes, and have heard many additional customers confirm that they're recovering. Our current estimate is that the majority of volumes will be recovered over the next five to six hours. As we mentioned in our last post, a smaller number of volumes will require a more time consuming process to recover, and we anticipate that those will take longer to recover."

The official cause of the glitch has yet to be determined but on the same day the trouble started, "online activism platform" demanding the release [http://www.change.org] of artist Ai Weiwei. Ai Weiwei, who helped designed the famous "Bird's Nest" stadium for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, was arrested on April 3 for "economic crimes" and has not been heard from since.

"For the past three days, the Change.org website has been repeatedly targeted by cyber attacks coming from China that aim to bring our site down, which would keep people from signing the petition," the email says. "Our engineers are working around the clock to fend off the attacks and, for now, the petition is still up."

By the time the email got out, however, the petition was gone, replaced by a message warning that "Change.org is currently unavailable due to a problem at our hosting provider, Amazon Web Services," along with occasional server connection resets. Could China's determination to stifle dissent have brought the internet to its knees? Amazon has thus far refused to comment on the situation so any connection between the two events is purely speculative at this point, but it will be interesting to see what filters out as the situation resolves.

On the plus side, Amazon did confirm on its Web Services forum [https://forums.aws.amazon.com/message.jspa?messageID=238872#238872] that the problem is not the result of a self-aware, rogue AI, writing, "From the information I have and to answer your questions, SkyNet did not have anything to do with the service event at this time."

Source: Fox News [http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/04/22/amazon-servers-websites-struggling/]


Permalink
 

deth2munkies

New member
Jan 28, 2009
1,066
0
0
Chinese hackers are old news. I only wish they had an actual internet structure worth messing with so we could get some payback every once in a while.

TheGoldenMan said:
Huh. This does not register in my brain...
Try registering your brain with another web service.
 

Scorched_Cascade

Innocence proves nothing
Sep 26, 2008
1,399
0
0
Wait, we are trusting a response posted by a computer? Who says that this whole thing isn't what SkyNet wants you to think? Then again maybe this is SkyNet speaking.
 

major28

New member
Feb 25, 2010
459
0
0
sooo what your telling me is i should turn my army of cyber hacers on china for making me not be able to play coop in portal 2
 

Uber Waddles

New member
May 13, 2010
544
0
0
Silly Communists. Acting childish and shooting your agenda in the foot all because "they said something we dont agree with waaaah."

Its a bit pathetic, and certainly shows how useless Communism is as a philosophy if it boils down to doing something that a bunch of internet punks with a mesiah complex can do just because of a petition they dont agree with.

Its a shame there will be no arrests or anything done, since China turns a blind eye to anyone doing illegal activities...

or since the government is more than likely behind it.
 

thethingthatlurks

New member
Feb 16, 2010
2,102
0
0
Yes...because everybody knows the way to get political prisoners released is to piss off redditors and to keep people from playing Portal across the Pacific. *shrugs* makes sense to me...
 

King_Serpent

GUY YOU DON'T KNOW
Jul 12, 2010
66
0
0
Just note everyone that the source is FOX NEWS the most untrustworthy news source on the planet. Just saying.
 

Thaluikhain

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 16, 2010
19,150
3,890
118
Um, when they say "hackers in China", do they mean the state has chosen this as policy, and paid a bunch of hackers to attack what they believe is the greatest cyber threat to them, or that this is a bunch of people wearing the Chinese equivalent of Guy Fawkes masks telling us how awesome they are?
 

Superhyperactiveman

New member
Jul 23, 2009
396
0
0
Why does it seem everyone is acting on the assumption that change.org is right? They could just be pulling that explanation out of their ass. They could just be doing it, because it makes their petition seem like some kind of big, important, world-changing thing, when, in reality, China will not listen no matter how many people sign it. I'm not saying it's a bad cause, mind you. I'm just saying consider the facts. How much actual evidence do we have that China is the cause of this? We may have a somewhat reasonable explanation of the events, but that's only valid by its own merits if we have no other reasonable explanations available. If there are others (especially less complicated ones a la Occam's Razor) such as "there's just a technical glitch in the server" (Or some other such nonsense I don't understand because technology escapes me) then we cannot jump to insane conclusions without the prescence of evidence.