Actually... it's interesting. Dyn DNS are an anycast DNS provider, and this means only local requests take a site down (routes to nearest servers), and the North American DNS is going down for them first.
What I'm saying is that most of the attack comes from within the USA.
Actually... it's interesting. Dyn DNS are an anycast DNS provider, and this means only local requests take a site down (routes to nearest servers), and the North American DNS is going down for them first.
What I'm saying is that most of the attack comes from within the USA.
It's a botnet, a huge one. Perhaps Mirai.