Categories: NewsSecurity

Criminals Leverage CLDAP Protocol to Conduct Amplified DDoS Attacks

Distributed denial-of-service attacks have quickly become one of the favorite tools among cyber criminals around the world. It appears some groups are taking things to the next level by leveraging the CLDAP protocol. As a result, they can amplify their DDoS attacks by as much as 700%. This is a very troublesome development, to say the least.

CLDAP Protocol Is Now A Criminal Tool

For those people who are unaware of what the CLDAP protocol is, allow us to briefly explain. It is a communication protocol used to connect, search, and modify internet directories. As one would expect, this particular protocol provides high performance at all times, as it can pump through data at an accelerated pace. So far, this protocol has only been used among network administrators to query data with relative ease.

Unfortunately, all good technologies are often used for nefarious purposes, and the CLDAP protocol is no different in this regard. A new report has surfaced, indicating criminals use CLDAP to amplify their direct denial-of-service attacks. It is believed they can make such attacks up to 70 times as powerful as before, which does not bode well for any part of the global internet infrastructure.

Researchers claim cybercriminals have been abusing the CLDAP protocol since late last year. That is quite a worrisome thought, although it is unclear which companies or services were targeted exactly. DDoS attacks leveraging the CLDAP protocol is not a positive development, as it only allows cybercriminals to shut down online services and platforms more easily. The last thing this world needs is more tools for online criminals to do bigger damage with less effort.

Related Post

The amplification part of the CLDAP protocol is of particular concern to security researchers right now. By using the CLDAP protocol, DDoS attackers can artificially increase the number of times a data packet is enlarged. At its peak, the CLDAP protocol can increase data packet sizes by as much as 700%. To be more specific, One bit of data sent through a DDoS attack over the CLDAP protocol results in the target receiving 700 bytes of data.

So far, researchers have discovered over four dozen DDoS attacks leveraging the CLDAP protocol. That is quite a significant number, although it is only a hint of what the future will hold. Given the vulnerability of the Internet of Things devices, leveraging a hundred devices can now become as powerful as using 7,000 devices in a coordinated DDoS attack. It wouldn’t take much effort to shut down websites, online banking portals or even DNS service provides such as DynDNS.

To put this latter part into perspective, it takes 1 Gbps of sustained HTTP requests to shut down the average website. The biggest DDoS attack leveraging CLDAP put through 24 Gbps, and that was merely a test to see how well the protocol would hold up under sustained throughput. It is evident things will get a lot more troublesome from here on out. Anti-DDoS providers will need to find ways to filter CLDAP traffic rather than try to block it, as they will fall woefully short otherwise.

If you liked this article, follow us on Twitter @themerklenews and make sure to subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest bitcoin, cryptocurrency, and technology news.

JP Buntinx

JP Buntinx is a FinTech and Bitcoin enthusiast living in Belgium. His passion for finance and technology made him one of the world's leading freelance Bitcoin writers, and he aims to achieve the same level of respect in the FinTech sector.

Share
Published by
JP Buntinx
Tags: CLDAPddos

Recent Posts

10 Trusted Cloud Mining Platforms to Earn Free Bitcoin Daily in 2026

  Cloud mining continues to gain massive traction as 2026 inches closer. In tough economic…

14 hours ago

Jupiter Pushes Onchain Finance Forward With Its Biggest Upgrade Wave Yet

Solana Breakpoint wasn’t just another conference this year. It doubled as a stage for Jupiter…

1 day ago

Ripple Payments Lands First European Bank With AMINA Bank AG

Ripple has scored a major regulatory milestone in Europe. AMINA Bank AG, a Swiss-regulated digital…

1 day ago

a16z’s 2026 Crypto Vision: Stablecoins Surge, Tokenization Grows, and Asia Becomes the Next Battleground

a16z just dropped its annual report, and the message is clear: crypto isn’t slowing down.…

2 days ago

Ethereum Activates BPO-1 Upgrade, Boosting Blob Capacity and Expanding the Network’s Scaling Roadmap

Ethereum has activated BPO-1, a protocol adjustment that increases blob capacity per block from 6…

2 days ago

CryptoBench: AI Meets DeFi, Head-On

CryptoBench just landed. Developed by ChainOpera AI and Princeton AI Lab, under the guidance of…

4 days ago