ADVERTISEMENT

WikiLeaks site evades hackers with shift to Amazon

November 30, 2010 02:10 am | Updated November 28, 2021 09:22 pm IST

Website moves front page to Amazon server hire service but keeps U.S. embassy cables out of reach

WikiLeaks, the site that has infuriated the US government by releasing thousands of US diplomatic cables, is being hosted by one of the symbols of that country’s internet success — Amazon.

The site came under a “Distributed Denial of Service” (DDOS) attack on Sunday night (28NOV) from an unidentified hacker, forcing it to seek a new location for its computer files. And it found it though Amazon’s “Elastic Cloud Computing” (EC2) service, which enables businesses to hire its servers and store their data there.

DDOS attacks typically force sites off the net unless they have enormous bandwidth at their disposal or highly effective countermeasures. WikiLeaks, being small and struggling for funds, is neither.

ADVERTISEMENT

But EC2 allows companies to pay for their usage as it mounts up, rather than upfront.

While Amazon is American, not all of its servers are hosted there — and it could cause a major incident if the U.S. government were to take action against a company on the basis that it might be hosting material the government finds embarrassing.

But the US government would not be able to remove the diplomatic cables from the internet by ordering Amazon to take down the WikiLeaks pages — partly because the cables are not hosted there: further digging shows that http://cablegate.wikileaks.org, where the documents are being held, is actually hosted by Octopuce, a French company.

ADVERTISEMENT

The use of Amazon’s EC2 is therefore more likely to be a convenient way of evading the DDOS attack. The pages that are hosted there do not appear to contain any of the sensitive information that the US government has been complaining about — meaning that it would have little legal cause to complain to Amazon. — © Guardian News & Media 2010

This is a Premium article available exclusively to our subscribers. To read 250+ such premium articles every month
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
You have exhausted your free article limit.
Please support quality journalism.
The Hindu operates by its editorial values to provide you quality journalism.
This is your last free article.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT