At 16:05 27/09/01 -0700, George William Herbert wrote:
Sean Donelan <sean@donelan.com> committed:
Which had more impact on the the net? 1. Destruction in New York City Sept 11 and following days 2. Nimda virus/worm on Sept Sept 18 and following days 3. Multiple fiber cuts on Sept 26
4. ICANN's thoughts on Internet security -Hank
My home business was down for hours from side effects of 1, most of a day from side effects of 2, and didn't notice 3.
Current backbone engineers I talk to on a regular basis fall about 50:50 into similar experience and having also taken a hit Sept 26 AM when Backhoe Roundup began.
Speaking of which, this *has* been an interesting 2+a bit week period; reflecting on the various effects sounds like a good NANOG paper.
The Nimda, Code Red I/II, and other worms had a more difuse impact. Their effects show up with a ramping period, peaking after a few hours and then slowly declining over several days. Their impact is extremely long lived. It mostly affects the edges of the network.
I'd disagree somewhat there. I think it mostly affects things the further from "backbones" that you get; a lot of ISPs took severe hits across their entire network depending on the manner in which IP space is allocated across their networks interacting with the attack patterns of Nimda. That doesn't map well to at least some usage of "edge", but I think I get your point...
-george william herbert gherbert@retro.com