Web monitors have confirmed several of Lycos' targets have been taken down...
By Dan Ilett
Published: 2 December 2004 16:30 GMT
Web portal company Lycos' 'Make love not spam' campaign has killed access to some of the websites of its target spammers as the result of denial-of-service attacks.
According to internet traffic monitoring company Netcraft, Lycos successfully took offline two websites hosted in China, bokwhdok.com and printmediaprofits.biz.
Netcraft's website said: "A distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack launched by users of Lycos Europe's MakeLoveNotSpam.com screensaver has succeeded in crippling several spammer sites, but some of the targeted sites remain available."
Lycos was unavailable for comment on the matter, but said yesterday it was not carrying out DDoS attacks, just slowing the bandwidth of its targets. It added it had no intention of taking websites offline.
Malte Pollmann, director of communication services for Lycos, said: "I have to be very clear that it's not a denial-of-service attack." "We slow the remaining bandwidth to five percent. It wouldn't be in our interests to [carry out DoS attacks]. It is to increase the cost of spamming. We have an interest to make this, economically, unattractive."
Yesterday, Lycos denied claims that it was hit by hacker attacks, but several reports, including one from Netcraft, have alleged that the 'Make love not spam' website was unavailable at several intervals. There is, however, no conclusive evidence either way on whether the defacement was a hoax or not.
Head of international spam fighting organisation Spamhaus Steve Linford said that by attacking spammer's bandwidth, Lycos could be attacking innocent users' bandwidth.
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