Hackers
 and cyber attacks are getting evil and worst nightmare for companies 
day-by-day. Just last week a group of hackers ruined the code-hosting 
and software collaboration platform, ‘Code Spaces’ by destroying their Amazon cloud server, complete data and its backup files too.
Recently, the largest ever and most severe Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks
 in the history of the Internet has been recorded that hit the online 
democracy poll promoting opinion on the upcoming Hong Kong elections.
PopVote,
 an online mock election operated by The University of Hong Kong’s 
Public Opinion Program, by Saturday recorded more than half a million 
votes in less than 30 hours in the unofficial referendum that provided 
permanent residents of Hong Kong to choose their preferred political 
representatives, that is suppose to be continued until June 29.
However,
 the Chief Executive is officially chosen by a 1,200-member Election 
Committee under the current political system and drawn largely from 
pro-Beijing and business camps.
On the first day of voting, China’s State Council denounced the voting as “illegal and invalid.”
 Hong Kong’s chief executive, Leung Chun-ying, said all the proposals on
 the ballot are not complied with Hong Kong’s Basic Law, the territory’s
 de facto constitution.
On Friday, Matthew Prince,
 the CEO and co-founder of San Francisco based CloudFlare, the web 
performance company maintaining the voting website, said that the DDoS 
attack on the Occupy Central’s voting platform was “one of the largest and most persistent” ever.
According to Prince, the 
cybercriminals appeared to be using a network of compromised computers 
around the world to effectively disable the service of the voting 
website with an overwhelming amount of traffic. In such cases of 
attacks, the computer users who are exploited are usually unaware that 
their systems have been compromised.
Prince also wrote on Twitter: “Battling 300Gbps+ attack right now,”
 on the first day that the vote began. Three hundred gigabits per second
 is an enormous amount of data to take down any huge servers.
Also a DDoS attack last year on Spamhaus,
 a non-profit organisation that aims to help email providers filter out 
spams and other unwanted contents, is largely considered to be the 
biggest DDoS attack in the history, which the Cloudflare said the attack
 “almost broke the Internet.”
 
 
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