The survey of 1000 medium and large organizations in ten countries found
that up to 45 percent of respondents experience such attacks on a
regular basis, a mixture of application and network-layer incursions.

About half rated denial of service attacks as highly effective with 79 percent saying they still relied on firewalls
to deflect them despite 42 percent finding that such devices were
ineffective against conventional attacks at the network layer.
The research also found that nearly half had detected attempts to access
encrypted data on networks, with 44 percent noticing attacks against
DNS servers, one of the most difficult-to-defend assets.
"Whilst many organizations can view insider threats as the most
difficult to defend against, the research clearly demonstrates that
external threats remain a potent force, and companies need to be aware
of the most effective ways to safeguard themselves," said F5's technical
director, Gary Newel.
Attacks on DNS servers were a clear worry, rated as being in the top three hard to repel attacks by a third of those asked.
"IT managers are between a rock and a hard place as attacks become more
sophisticated and the cost of a breach continues to rise," said Newel.
The anxiety over DDoS attacks is far from new although exactly how to defend against it, not surprisingly, divides vendors.
Some see the best solution as being better routing infrastructure
because routers are the first to handle DDoS packets as they move into a
network. F5 is out to push its Big-IP Application Delivery Controllers
which act in effect as load-balancing application firewalls. Another
option is to use multiple layers and bundle the hardware level as a
service.
During the recent launch of the Technology Operations Centre for the 2012 Olympic Games
in London, organisers touted an array of security measures to counter
the menace of a large DDoS disrupting content distribution from the
global event.
By (pcworld.com)
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