Blacklists are still a thing. Since those attacks are not spoofed, every victim sees the attack origin as it is. Blocking it for a while should be enough to thwart the attack and not disturb the possible end-user.
Missing from the article: Links to lists of IPs that they recommend to be blacklisted. It's the same thing that's missing from pretty much every NetSec vendor.
We really need a recovery clinic for compulsive threat-data hoarders.
What to do in such a situation?
Blacklists are still a thing. Since those attacks are not spoofed, every victim sees the attack origin as it is. Blocking it for a while should be enough to thwart the attack and not disturb the possible end-user.
Missing from the article: Links to lists of IPs that they recommend to be blacklisted. It's the same thing that's missing from pretty much every NetSec vendor.
We really need a recovery clinic for compulsive threat-data hoarders.