| ▲ | lucb1e 2 hours ago | |||||||
> you can't possibly orchestrate filing all of the complaints To the ISPs? Each IP range has an abuse email address registered and this is specifically exempt from rate limiting at RIPE's WHOIS server. Not sure how it is in other RIRs but I just happen to know of this policy You can automate the whole thing, provided that you have a reliable way of identifying the undesired traffic which you need anyway for being able to block it by any means. The trouble is in user identification (they'll just use a new IP address from that ISP or hosting provider if you don't tell the provider about the problematic user) | ||||||||
| ▲ | tangledhelix an hour ago | parent [-] | |||||||
See what I wrote above (and let me say I am talking about Project Gutenberg and Distributed Proofreaders here, I am one of the admins on both). A large amount of the hassle traffic we've seen is as I wrote above, the IPs come from everywhere and in many cases, each IP makes a single request and doesn't come back. They change user-agent dynamically, etc, to masquerade as regular traffic. They come from residential, cloud/hyperscale, corporate, educational, government, all the networks, on every continent. This is many thousands of "open a ticket with someone" events per hour territory. It's as difficult to fight as DDoS itself for the same reasons (presumably the harvesting parties know that and that's exactly why this approach is used). Others online have been writing about their own experience with the same stuff; it's not unique to PG at all, it's everywhere. Talk to anyone that runs a web server and they'll have these stories... | ||||||||
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