Siang agan-agan semua...selamat datang di trit ane,
Spoiler for PERTAMA:
semoga ga
Oke, buat yang tau game Dota 2, ada berita nih. Mungkin kalian juga beberapa ada yang sering mengalami, kalian kadang tiba-tiba disconnectsendiri ?? Well, bisa jadi itu karena hal ini juga, server/region dimana kita main diserang Tapi sekali lagi... bisa jadi lho gan, sapa tau, ada masalah sama ISP kita sendiri
So..ini beritanya,
Quote:
G-1, the Chinese Dota 2 league, has been suspended by organisers 17173, following a series of DDoS attacks that caused players to disconnect during their games. The attacks began on Sunday, affecting players from Team Dignitas, Evil Geniuses and Kaipi. 17173 say they are working to rectify the issues, and have sought technical advice from Valve.
“Over the past few days, matches on the DOTA2 European servers have been faced with a serious series of DDoS attacks from unknown sources, which has caused players to continuously disconnect and ultimately made it impossible to carry on the competition,” writes a G-1 spokesperson on Reddit. “In light of the current situation, 17173 and 2P.com have decided to postpone the G-1 Western Qualifiers while waiting for advice on technical solutions from Valve.
“What next? We’ve shared a guide with all the teams in the G-1 Western Qualifiers yesterday on steps to take to prevent DDoS attacks. Additionally, communications are established with Valve, reporting what has happened in the past few days of G-1 Champions League, along with related details regarding what we know about the as-yet unidentified DDoS attacker(s).”
Sunday’s attack forced a mass disconnect from members of Evil Geniuses, with admins ultimately declaring their opponents Absolute Legends the winners due to their in-game advantage at the time.
While the source of the attacks isn’t known, one 4Chan poster claimed responsibility, saying it was to prevent him losing a $20,000 bet. This is 4Chan though, so pinch of salt and all.
It’ll be interesting to see what measures and recommendations G-1′s organisers implement to halt future attacks. Certainly this isn’t the first time players have been hit by a DDoS. Ultimately, it seems teams and organisers are going to need to be more rigorous in their protection of players IP addresses – taking steps to make them less easily accessible.
Yang intinya, (maap ane masih kurang skill Englishnya ) jadi, di waktu event turnamen Dota 2, yaitu G-1 (turnamen di China)
Spoiler for G-1 League:
ditunda karena ada serangan DDoS yang menyebabkan beberapa pemain disconnectsecara bersamaan pas mereka lagi main. Tapi ga hanya pas di event turnamen itu aja gan, di server Eropa juga sempat mengalami serangan DDoS ini. Yang dimana bikin kita terus-terusan disconnect gan, dan bikin kita ga bisa ngelanjutin lagi
Nah, yang kena waktu turnamen G-1 ini, itu tim Dignitas. Enak-enak lagi maen, beh..malah tiba-tiba disconnect di tengah-tengah permainan turnamen.
Mungkin, inilah yang bikin kita sering disconnect sendiri dan susah untuk reconnect lagi.
Spoiler for DDoS Attack:
Spoiler for Salah satu cara proteksi dari DDoS:
There are two separate trains of thought when it comes to protecting your IP Address online. The first group of people (by far the most prevalent) suggest masking your IP address using a VPN. These people are the unwashed mongrels; the filthy, wandering sheep. They are uneducated and they have been brainwashed by capitalism and Nazis to believe this to be the right (and best answer) to their problems.
It isn’t.
There is a small, elite force of unorganized, rag-tag individuals who have risen above the masses. When times were dark, and people were losing their homes and cars while forking over outrageous dollar amounts for VPNs that wouldn’t even remain functional while being hit with larger botnets, this krack-team assembled and found a solution to their problems.
Okay, I’m exaggerating (but only a little!). However, a lot of people recommend using a VPN if you’re having trouble with DDoS problems, but I think I have a much, much better solution.
Masking your entire internet presence with a VPN
A VPN is a Virtual Private Network. To keep things simple, a VPN can be imagined as connecting to someone else’s router, per-say, except that other person is actually another network located somewhere on the internet. Instead of physically connecting to that person’s network with, say, an ethernet cord, like you would a normal router, you connect to their network via a program you download.
The idea behind a VPN is that you’re putting a middle-man between your internet connection and every website you visit. This means that your League of Legends, Starcraft, Skype, etc…etc…traffic is ALL being routed through a VPN. A VPN is nice because it’s 100% fool-proof: once you’re on your VPN, there is no way you can “mess up” and leak your IP anywhere because literally 100% of your outbound/inbound connections will be traveling through the VPN. If someone DDoSes you, it’s the VPN that takes the hit, not you.
The problem with using a VPN is that you introduce a middleman between a lot of unnecessary programs that will serve to increase latency and potentially cause trouble for you, should your VPN ever go down. It also may be difficult to find a VPN that accepts a large amount of traffic if, say, you wish to stream your gameplay, or you do a lot of torrenting online. There are a lot of programs that also don’t really “need” to be masked. Most games connect to servers, meaning no other client (or person playing said games) will ever actually “see” your unique IP address, unless they literally hacked into the servers you were playing on. The chances of a company like Blizzard, RioT, or Valve having their servers compromised are incredibly low.
The alternate train of thought (which I hope will become much more widespread and mainstream after people finish reading this) is that you siphon only a small part of your internet connection off.
Masking only a portion of your network presence with a VPS
A VPS is a Virtual Private Server. Again, for the sake of simplicity, you can imagine a VPS to be the same thing as a virtual machine (VM). It’s basically another system that you connect to in order to tunnel specific traffic through it. This other VM is hosted on a separate network somewhere and ideally it is running an operating system (some unix-derivative) that can accept Secure Shell (SSH) traffic.
The idea behind a VPS is much the same as the VPN – you’re still putting a middle man between your internet connection and the websites you visit. The difference with the VPS is that instead of masking your entire internet connection, you’re only masking the small parts of your activity of which are unavoidably exposed to other people, such as with p2p applications like Skype.
The only drawbacks to using a VPS is that it can be a tad bit more complicated to set-up. Once you have everything up and running, however, you will never want to go back to routing everything through a VPN.
*One quick thing I would like to note about either of these methods is that this is only a means to protect your IP Address from being seen by other people. You can still download virus’ or other malicious programs onto your computer and suffer the same damages, regardless of whether or not you are hidden behind a VPS or VPN.