31.08.2013, 22:49
Hi,
I thought of a new idea to stop ddos that teamspeak has been using for a long time now. Basically in teamspeak if you want your teamspeak server to be accessed with an address such as "ts.sa-mp.com" you can do that by running their software on your server that hosts sa-mp.com and changing the DNS settings file which they provide. I guess it works by the software telling the teamspeak company's server that "ts.sa-mp.com" should send the user to "255.255.255.255" (example of an IP) so really the user never knows the actual IP address because "ts.sa-mp.com" doesn't actually exist and therefore cannot attack it. The attacker could still ddos "sa-mp.com" and users could not connect to the server but at least the sa-mp server would be intact and you could also block the incoming traffic. My suggestion is that SA-MP should do the same to protect servers.
Unless of course it's somehow possible to see the address of the server you are connected to by using software to trace data leaving/entering your computer to/from the SA-MP server.
I thought of a new idea to stop ddos that teamspeak has been using for a long time now. Basically in teamspeak if you want your teamspeak server to be accessed with an address such as "ts.sa-mp.com" you can do that by running their software on your server that hosts sa-mp.com and changing the DNS settings file which they provide. I guess it works by the software telling the teamspeak company's server that "ts.sa-mp.com" should send the user to "255.255.255.255" (example of an IP) so really the user never knows the actual IP address because "ts.sa-mp.com" doesn't actually exist and therefore cannot attack it. The attacker could still ddos "sa-mp.com" and users could not connect to the server but at least the sa-mp server would be intact and you could also block the incoming traffic. My suggestion is that SA-MP should do the same to protect servers.
Unless of course it's somehow possible to see the address of the server you are connected to by using software to trace data leaving/entering your computer to/from the SA-MP server.