How to lose friends and DDoS people
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How to lose friends and DDoS people

48:43 Feb 26, 2026
About this episode
When the mysterious operator of an internet archiving-service decided to silence a curious Finnish blogger, they didn’t just send a stroppy email - they allegedly weaponised their own CAPTCHA page to launch a DDoS attack, threatened to invent an entirely new genre of AI porn, and tampered with parts of their own archive to smear the blogger's name.In this episode, we unravel how a website designed to preserve history may have trashed its own credibility - and how Wikipedia responded when trust went out the window.Plus a ransomware gang shoots itself in the foot with a classic case of buffoonery, accidentally corrupting the very keys victims would need to decrypt their data. When even the criminals can’t unlock your files, what happens next?All this, a surprisingly zen Pick of the Week, and a gloriously splenetic rant against web forms, on episode 456 of the award-winning "Smashing Security" podcast, with cybersecurity veteran Graham Cluley and special guest Paul Ducklin.EPISODE LINKS:This App Will Detect People Wearing Smart Glasses Near You - Lifehacker.Patients listed as dead after major NZ health app MediMap hacked - 1News.Why fake AI videos of UK urban decline are taking over social media - BBC News.FBI orders domain registrar to reveal who runs mysterious Archive.is site - Ars Technica.Archive.today CAPTCHA page executes DDoS; Wikipedia considers banning site - Ars Technica.Archive.today is directing a DDOS attack against my blog - Gyrovague.Critical buffer overflow bug - in ESXi ransomware - SolCyber.Yoga with Adriene - YouTube.Smashing Security merchandise (t-shirts, mugs, stickers and stuff)SPONSORS:Coreview -
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