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  2. Fix problems with Games on AOL.com - AOL Help

    help.aol.com/articles/troubleshooting-games-com...

    Temporarily disable your security application, such as your firewall or antivirus program, until you've successfully launched your game. Re-enable your security software immediately afterwards. Some antivirus or personal firewall applications incorrectly identify our games as viruses and disrupt or block the game.

  3. DDoS attacks on Dyn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DDoS_attacks_on_Dyn

    As a DNS provider, Dyn provides to end-users the service of mapping an Internet domain name—when, for instance, entered into a web browser—to its corresponding IP address. The distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack was accomplished through numerous DNS lookup requests from tens of millions of IP addresses. [ 6 ]

  4. Internet outage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_outage

    DNS TLD Outage: Worldwide: 50,000,000: An Ingres database failure resulted in corrupt .com and .net zones, which were subsequently released to the DNS root servers. As the root servers were reloaded, they began to return failures for all domains in the .com and .net zones. [29] [30] 4 hours: DNS: Automation and Human Failure: InterNIC / Network ...

  5. IPv6 brokenness and DNS whitelisting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPv6_brokenness_and_DNS...

    Google, a major provider of services on the Internet, experimented with using a type of DNS allowlisting on a per-ISP basis to prevent this [9] [10] until the World IPv6 Launch. In the DNS allowlisting approach, ISPs are determined from DNS lookup source IP addresses by correlating them with network prefixes derived from routing tables .

  6. DNS hijacking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNS_hijacking

    DNS hijacking, DNS poisoning, or DNS redirection is the practice of subverting the resolution of Domain Name System (DNS) queries. [1] This can be achieved by malware that overrides a computer's TCP/IP configuration to point at a rogue DNS server under the control of an attacker, or through modifying the behaviour of a trusted DNS server so that it does not comply with internet standards.

  7. Distributed denial-of-service attacks on root nameservers

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_denial-of...

    However, in practice, the root nameserver infrastructure is highly resilient and distributed, using both the inherent features of DNS (result caching, retries, and multiple servers for the same zone with fallback if one or more fail), and, in recent years, a combination of anycast and load balancer techniques used to implement most of the ...

  8. DNS sinkhole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DNS_sinkhole

    A DNS sinkhole, also known as a sinkhole server, Internet sinkhole, or Blackhole DNS [1] is a Domain Name System (DNS) server that has been configured to hand out non-routable addresses for a certain set of domain names. Computers that use the sinkhole fail to access the real site. [2]

  9. BGP hijacking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BGP_hijacking

    One useful offshoot of this concept is called BGP anycasting and is frequently used by root DNS servers to allow multiple servers to use the same IP address, providing redundancy and a layer of protection against DoS attacks without publishing hundreds of server IP addresses. The difference in this situation is that each point advertising a ...