no clue... just going by what others have said. Could these people be lying as well.. sure
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Godaddy actually switched their own DNS records to VeriSign to bring their own site back up.
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My brother in law is an SQL manager for go daddy and he stated yesterday that it was indeed a ddos...in fact it was. ..."another fun day at work..been down with ddos attack for an hour now....stupid script kiddies think ddos is hacking "
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(I said this in another thread but it's worth mentioning here, with all the disinformation going around.)
I didn't follow the events while they occurred but my understanding is only the DNS servers were down. You could still reach servers, godaddy, etc. by IP.
The DNS servers were ******. Perhaps hacked, or perhaps ****** in other ways, but they were ******, and that's all there was to it. There was no router table corruption or network misconfiguration since they were reachablewhile their DNS servers were ******.
Therefore, in conclusion, their DNS servers were ****** and nothing else. They just don't want to admit that.
Addendum:
The SQL injection theory is sort of plausible since godaddy DNS was manageable through a web interface and changes were reflected immediately. Most companies have a habit of not applying secure coding practices, and no doubt their **** was kludged together by different people over the years (they grew too quick and chaotically, plus the management seems incompetent given their history and culture). I suspect foul-play, a couple of critical tables dropped that ****** DNS service, and a slow painful recovery procedure -- I imagine their DNS database probably being one of their largest amount of data pertaining to their infrastructure.
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It was external even if it wasn't anonymous. Yesterday a co-worker and I clicked through their site and most links off of the homepage linked to the trollface with the word "Problem?" underneath it. Wish we had taken screenshots of that, cause it definitely wasn't caused by a router issue.