Think about the value for a second, 2.4 Tbps. Holy cow. According to a blog post published by Microsoft, the business was able to withstand an enormous distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack aga... Microsoft averts the greatest DDoS attempt against Azure in history, peak of 2.4Tbps
MS may not have revealed the name of the client affected, but I think the clues are there in the graph. Looking at the time of the biggest attack, I suspect it was a dentist surgery that was ddossed. Seriously though, isn't this a story just planted for advertising purposes, is there any independant data to back up these claims.
when this sort of thing along with ransomware and other nasty stuff gets easy enough to be done by the average twitch streaming kids, total cyber warfare will begin, all centralized honeypots will be annihilated hopefully everyone has their NAS ready at that point
this is why i have my own "cloud". but mainly so my old hard drives aren't wasted. i don't think anyone would want or need to attack me. but then again miscreant kids at the 'puter...
Bits per second means very little to me. My data is measured in bytes so that value is 300 Gigabytes per second. If I could make a file that is five bits long then it might be relevant but that's unlikely.
Every network term and their dog getting measured in bits . In this instance ms did nothing unusual to make the numbers bigger all you have to do is x bits = x/8 bytes And it says everything is like i am telling you 1/2 of a kg and you are telling me that tells me nothing say 0.5