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Comments
"This is what happens when we have net neutrality."
BlackLotus
Hasn't bothered contacting us or returning our calls, their phone line is busy/dead.
Staminus
Got back to us with a reasonable price for what they protect, far too expensive for a LET host though.
Incapsula
The guy on LiveChat was clueless, waiting to talk to someone over the phone now.
Their traffic costs would put them over Staminus' quote.
Uhm.. online.net DDOS bussiness or pro package? Maybe could handle the things. But i dont know how much they could handle.
C E N T A R R A
I recommend you spin up a Centarra VPS, 100 gigabit filtering.. for as little as 7 bucks
We're doing that at the moment, still waiting for it to deploy.
They would be a good bet -- kaniini really knows his stuff. However, I can't imagine any company wanting to bring that kind of traffic to their network without a hefty price tag attached. Best of luck to you.
You totally need blacklotus. But they are not LE* friendly :-) If you want it done right, pay for it. Alternatively, try Firehost.
HA! I just noticed "nenolod" in the Centarra Screenshot. I recognize the name from EFnet and other networks. This guy knows what he's doing.
He apparently left Centarra (and the hosting industry) "many months" ago:
http://lowendtalk.com/discussion/comment/681585/#Comment_681585
kaniini left didn't he?
The Centarra website says basic DDoS protection is only 10gbps guaranteed
You might check Exelion they use Centarra network
State of the art enterprise-grade redundant Anti-DDoS network
100 gigabits per second and 200 million packets per second mitigation
http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1398936&highlight=exelion
http://bgp.he.net/dns/exelion.net#_ipinfo
CNServers is good, I know a friend that uses Ramnode Seattle DDOS protected IP and it handles attacks > 20Gbps just fine, other DDOS protected Ramnode locations can't do this though.
My friend uses it as a reverse proxy to a popular minecraft server that gets attacked all the time.
BlackLotus doesn't know how to have a working phone line, so it's not my problem. Either way, Centarra is working great so far, and CloudFlare pro blocks most of the DNS angry. I'm working on a deal with Staminus at the moment for a more permanent solution, but a BGP deployments takes up to six weeks with them.
As far as I am aware yes
You could take a look at Voxility or OVH for Mitigating floods as large as the one you are receiving. As they have a Massive Network that is capable of handling large floods without a Problem. Oles has provided proof of this through his twitter. when they successfully migrated 100-200GB NTP Attack against 2 separate clients.
@kaniini left Centarra.
Good luck with DDoS Protection.
Did you read the thread, or just proceeded to vomit everywhere and hope it hit someone who has that fetish?
Why not just get a OVH dedi and set it to drop all UDP on their firewall?
Read the thread wrong, Currently 2.40AM here. Edited it a few moments after posting, Guess I was too late to avoid your kind words.
Probably the easier and cheap solution, Anyway what happened to pytohost?
Hey man, what if he wants to take 44Gbps on his 20Gbps network ? Maybe that's his fetish instead?
/jokes.
The sad part is we had the site on OVH to begin with, but it was getting hit too hard there (by OVH's own servers.)
Do a TCP dump while there and forward it to the VAC Team?
With OVH couldn't you just setup ACL's to block the OVH local/remote traffic or just simply make it drop UDP at the Firewall/Router level via their cp?
OVH still hasn't replied to my tickets or abuse emails in regards to why their servers (ns22001xxxx.ovh.net) were the major contributors on attacks against our servers. Now that we're on a box that can handle the attack, we can actually sit and watch all the connections that get through; and it's not nice.
I'm relatively sure that you can get a firewall on OVH's side for about $30/mth? Ordered from their panel.