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February 8, 2010 10:46 AM PST

Verizon temporarily blocks some 4chan sites

by Elinor Mills

Verizon temporarily blocked traffic from some Web sites affiliated with the 4chan online forum on Monday after finding that some affiliate sites were apparently launching network attacks.

"Our network security system found traffic from some 4Chan Web sites that had strong potential to disrupt the Verizon Wireless network, affecting our customers' use of their services," Verizon spokesman Jeffrey Nelson wrote in an e-mail to CNET. "With continuing investigation, and ensuring no current risk of harm, we are giving the green-light to all 4Chan traffic. We will continue to monitor for any possibility of network harm."

He also posted an explanation on Twitter: "Never a block on 4Chan but some of its other sites were launching network attacks."

It was unclear which sites were affected and exactly what the trouble was. The sites appear to have been "explicitly blocked" for as long as three days, according to the 4chan status page.

In July, AT&T blocked a 4chan server after another site launched a denial-of-service type of attack called a SYN Flood attack on the site. 4chan users, notorious for their Internet pranks, responded angrily by posting a fake story on CNN's iReport citizen journalism site alleging that AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson had died.

Update 1:51 p.m. PST: Verizon posted this statement on the company's policy blog:

"Recently, Verizon Wireless security and external experts detected attacks from an IP address associated with the 4Chan family of web sites that was disruptive to our customers and our network. To protect both, we eliminated connectivity to the IP address. At no time was 4Chan itself blocked. Ongoing network security team monitoring has now determined there is no longer an immediate threat. Connectivity to those sites is being restored later today.

"Typically, these attacks involve someone sending hundreds of thousands of messages to wireless devices to round up active customer addresses for follow-up activity including hacker attacks. These 'sweeps' can jam our network and deliver unwanted electronic messages that also can drain customer devices' battery life and slow their operation.

"We take being the nation's most reliable wireless network seriously. Seriously enough to protect our customers and our network from malicious attacks, even if we get dinged in the blogosphere. It's easy to complain about 'blocking' when your wireless data connection is stable, fast and reliable. But try connecting to the web from your Droid or Blackberry when attacks slow - and potentially block - use of our network all together.

"We monitor against attacks and potential attacks to ensure the integrity of the Verizon Wireless network. Our customers expect nothing less."

Some 4chan affiliate sites were temporarily blocked by Verizon over the weekend.

(Credit: 4chan)

Elinor Mills covers Internet security and privacy. She joined CNET News in 2005 after working as a foreign correspondent for Reuters in Portugal and writing for The Industry Standard, the IDG News Service, and the Associated Press. E-mail Elinor.
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by redmarine February 8, 2010 11:29 AM PST
"4chan users, notorious for their Internet pranks, responded angrily by posting a fake story on CNN's iReport citizen journalism site alleging that AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson had died. "

Good old 4Chan... How would the internet be without you.

Still, pretty cool that the Chans can cause so much trouble.
Reply to this comment 3 people like this comment
by Shinespark February 8, 2010 12:33 PM PST
The /b/tards are all laughing, I'm sure.
I think 4chan is a pretty cool guy. eh kills websites and doesn't afraid of anything.
3 people like this comment
by Captainwtf February 8, 2010 12:34 PM PST
wat is this i dont even....
1 person likes this comment
by Police_States_of_America February 8, 2010 11:30 AM PST
>some Web sites affiliated with the 4chan online forum

4chan is an imageboard not a forum. also this statement doesnt make sense, was 4chan blocked or not? "some web sites affiliated" does not really make sense.
Reply to this comment 1 person likes this comment
by ddesy February 8, 2010 11:53 AM PST
There really isn't much difference between an imageboard and a forum that allows images.
by DustoMan February 8, 2010 12:44 PM PST
@ddesy If you look at how an imageboard is structured and the rules for posting, there's a huge difference.
by clamenza February 9, 2010 7:06 AM PST
I guess this kind of difference matters to channies (?). To the rest of the world, it doesn't.
by joodi3k February 8, 2010 12:56 PM PST
*hears the sound of a few thousand Guy Fawkes masks being dusted off*



really more like a few hundred





ok. maybe ten
Reply to this comment 2 people like this comment
by [RR]Macavity February 8, 2010 4:58 PM PST
More like OVER 9000, amirite?
by Yelonde February 8, 2010 8:53 PM PST
All of these ISPs are proving to be quite unreliable, and slightly more evil than usual. I sure hope I can switch to a local ISP soon :(
Reply to this comment
by Ebraheem February 9, 2010 1:55 AM PST
That's funny. All the ISP's where I live block 4chan, permanently.
Reply to this comment
by pjk0 February 9, 2010 2:47 AM PST
Yeah, it must be those "evil" ISPs again. Couldn't possibly be the kiddies over at AnnoyingChan, who spend a good part of their days trying to cook up ways to disrupt other people's connectivity...

Maybe when the kiddies grow up, they'll get learn what the inside of an adult jail is like too, since that sort of network disruption is very illegal in this country.
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About InSecurity Complex

Elinor Mills became fascinated with hacker culture when she was sent to Las Vegas to cover DefCon in 1995. Since then, script kiddies have given way to cyber criminals targeting bank passwords, and privacy risks are everywhere, from Google to Facebook and the iPhone. InSecurity Complex keeps tabs on the flaws, the foibles, and the fixes.

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