New, from me:

KrebsOnSecurity last week was hit by a near record distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack that clocked in at more than 6.3 terabits of data per second (a terabit is one trillion bits of data). The brief attack appears to have been a test run for a massive new Internet of Things (IoT) botnet capable of launching crippling digital assaults that few web destinations can withstand. Read on for more about the botnet, the attack, and the apparent creator of this global menace.

According to Google, the botnet that hit my site - at a rate of 585 million packets per second -- is an IoT botnet known as Aisuru, and it is the same one that hit Cloudflare with a remarkably similar attack last month. I interviewed the self-professed creator of Aisuru, a 21 y/o Brazilian who goes by the handle "Forky." Forky denied being involved in an attack on my site, but he also lied in almost everything else he told me.

There's a lot more to this story, including some eerie parallels between Aisuru's rise and that of the Mirai IoT botnet, which became so powerful because it effectively out-competed every other DDoS botnet in existence, giving them enormous firepower. Ironically, this same concentration of power happens each time the FBI conducts another one of its mass takedowns of DDoS-for-hire services. The ones that don't get taken down benefit enormously.

https://krebsonsecurity.com/2025/05/krebsonsecurity-hit-with-near-record-6-3-tbps-ddos/

KrebsOnSecurity Hit With Near-Record 6.3 Tbps DDoS – Krebs on Security

@briankrebs
Someone still using the "r" slur should probably be looked at with strong suspicion.