A friend of mine, like an ass, DDoS'ed me for 5000 seconds (1 hour)..
Therange was 50000-60000, and everytime the server didn't receive a response from a port, it would change..
I was using peerblock and blocking all of the incoming requests, which was working, but there was way too many ports, and like I said, when I blocked one, it would send to another..
I'm sure it went well over 60000 too, but it ended before then..
Anyway, the friend said he stopped it and he apologized.. He didn't realize he wouldn't be able to stop it once he started it.. NOTE: He payed for a website subscription, he doesn't host these attacks himself.
Now, almost 12 hours after the original attack, I'm receiving these connections again..
Just take a look at peerblock...
I'm getting probably 10-20 every 5 seconds and spurts of about 30-50 for 5 seconds straight every minute or so.
The most frequent ones are IPv6 and I can't block those, but as my local address, once again, if I block those, new ones start connecting, so it's useless to try to block it..
I've tried resetting the modem to get a new dynamic IP but I didn't do it long enough (I'll try that again soon)
With the router turned off I'm still receiving these pings in peerblock, which makes me think that it's actually just something I'm running that is causing these massive connection attempts, but I've never had this issue before with peerblock, and I don't think it's a coincedence that it only started when the DDoS attack started, and it's the same ports that were connecting during the attack..
What can I do to stop these? My friend promises he's stopped... Could the DDoS attack done something to my network to cause it to forever relay remnants of the attack? HELP!
Thanks..
-Yebba
Therange was 50000-60000, and everytime the server didn't receive a response from a port, it would change..
I was using peerblock and blocking all of the incoming requests, which was working, but there was way too many ports, and like I said, when I blocked one, it would send to another..
I'm sure it went well over 60000 too, but it ended before then..
Anyway, the friend said he stopped it and he apologized.. He didn't realize he wouldn't be able to stop it once he started it.. NOTE: He payed for a website subscription, he doesn't host these attacks himself.
Now, almost 12 hours after the original attack, I'm receiving these connections again..
Just take a look at peerblock...
I'm getting probably 10-20 every 5 seconds and spurts of about 30-50 for 5 seconds straight every minute or so.
The most frequent ones are IPv6 and I can't block those, but as my local address, once again, if I block those, new ones start connecting, so it's useless to try to block it..
I've tried resetting the modem to get a new dynamic IP but I didn't do it long enough (I'll try that again soon)
With the router turned off I'm still receiving these pings in peerblock, which makes me think that it's actually just something I'm running that is causing these massive connection attempts, but I've never had this issue before with peerblock, and I don't think it's a coincedence that it only started when the DDoS attack started, and it's the same ports that were connecting during the attack..
What can I do to stop these? My friend promises he's stopped... Could the DDoS attack done something to my network to cause it to forever relay remnants of the attack? HELP!

Thanks..
-Yebba