Telstra’s NBN 250 plan drops to NBN 50 prices
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Read MoreMicrosoft has confirmed that the recent outage that struck a number of its cloud-based services came as a result of a DNS DDoS attack.
The outage, which lasted for roughly two hours, was triggered by an “anomalous surge” in DNS queries that came from all over the world and were targeting a set of Azure-hosted domains.
Microsoft’s users were recently unable to access a whole slew of cloud-based services, such as Xbox Live, Microsoft Office, SharePoint Online, Microsoft Intune, Dynamics 365, Microsoft Teams, Skype, Exchange Online, OneDrive, Yammer, Power BI, Power Apps, OneNote, Microsoft Managed Desktop, and Microsoft Streams.
The company isn’t pointing any fingers, noting that, “Azure DNS servers experienced an anomalous surge in DNS queries from across the globe targeting a set of domains hosted on Azure. Normally, Azure’s layers of caches and traffic shaping would mitigate this surge. In this incident, one specific sequence of events exposed a code defect in our DNS service that reduced the efficiency of our DNS Edge caches."
With an overload on DNS services, clients started retrying requests frequently, only exacerbating the problem, the company said. These tries, however, are legitimate and were not dropped by the volumetric spike mitigation system. “This increase in traffic led to decreased availability of our DNS service.”
After the mandatory apology for the inconvenience caused, the company said it repaired the problem, adding that DNS caches shouldn’t have problems handling traffic spikes anymore.
It also said it will improve how it monitors and mitigates anomalies in traffic, without detailing what it plans on doing at this time.
Various media reports have claimed the outage uncovered major flaws in Microsoft’s modus operandi, as even a signficant DDoS attack should not really be able to take Azure down - with a company error when implementing DNS Edge caches also possibly to blame.
Via: MSPoweruser
Telstra has slashed the price of its fastest NBN plans even further to keep pace with the competition.
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Read MoreFujitsu has quietly revealed its plans to shutter both its mainframe and Unix server system business by the end of this decade. In a notice posted to the Japanese IT giant's website, the company announced its plans to stop selling its mainframes and Unix server systems by 2030 though support systems will continue for an additional five years. Fujitsu will stop manufacturing and selling its mainframe systems by 2030 as well as discontinue its Unix server systems by the end of 2029. As support services for both portfolios will extend for another five years, 2034 will mark the end of support for its Unix servers while 2035 will be the end of its mainframes. In its notice, Fujitsu argues that “everything in society will be connected by digital touchpoints” in the near future which will require new, robust digital infrastructure. As such, businesses will need to reevaluate their existing core systems and embrace a fully digital, hybrid IT model to remain competitive and sustainable. Fujitsu's plan also includes a timetable for shifting its mainframes and Unix servers to the cloud as part of a new business brand called Fujitsu Uvance. Through this new brand, the company aims to provide businesses access to computing resources such as HPC using an as-a-service model that will give them access to advanced capabilities when needed. While the move makes sense for the future of Fujitsu, the company's mainframe customers now have a deadline before which they will need to migrate their mainframe applications to another platform or rebuild them from scratch on modern infrastructure. However, mainframes are a long-term investment for organizations that often handle their most mission-critical applications. On the Unix server side, customers have things a bit easier as their workloads can be transitioned to Linux without too much of a hassle. We'll likely hear more from Fujitsu as the company begins winding down both its mainframe and Unix server businesses. Via The RegisterFujitsu Uvance
Proof-of-concept exploit code has been released for a wormable vulnerability in Windows 10 and Windows server.
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