William Hill Knocked Offline in Suspected Mirai Attack

William Hill Knocked Offline in Suspected Mirai Attack.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

William Hill hit by cyber attackThe Mirai botnet may have been used to overwhelm William Hill’s systems in the lead up to this week’s Champions League soccer matches. (Image: Shutterstock)

William Hill’s website crashed under the strain of a DDoS attack on Tuesday evening.

The cyberattack was described as “sophisticated” by the bookmaker, prompting speculation that it was the work of the Mirai botnet.

Mirai is the mother of all DDoS viruses and recently took out a large portion of the internet when it targeted the servers of tech company Dyn, which controls much of the internet’s DNS infrastructure.

Dyn said it was the most powerful DDoS attack ever recorded, and resulted in everything from Twitter, to Netflix, to the CNN website being knocked offline.

(distributed denial of service) attacks overwhelm a company’s website with thousands of meaningless requests for information, temporarily paralyzing it until, typically, a ransom is paid or the site’s technicians or web-hosting company are able to fend off the threat.

Champions League Betting Disrupted

Mirai, which first surfaced in mid-September, is more potent than those that preceded it because it is able to harness the power of thousands of Internet of Things (IoT) devices, focusing them on a central server (botnet) to boost the power of an attack. The source of the code was posted publicly online on a hackers’ forum in early October.     

“Someone has a botnet with capabilities we haven’t seen before,” said a senior security advocate at Akamai, in the wake of the first ever Mirai attack. “We looked at the traffic coming from the attacking systems, and they weren’t just from one region of the world or from a small subset of networks, they were everywhere.”

The online gambling industry, and online sports books, in particular, have long been targets of cyber attackers. Their reliance on large sporting events for a chunk of their profits make them easy targets of extortion.

Sure enough, the attacks on the William Hill website appeared to be timed to coincide with the mid-week UEFA Champions League taking place in Europe.

Battling the Botnet

“The online services of were intermittently impacted during the course of yesterday following distributed denial of service (DDoS) activity by third parties,” said a spokesman for the bookmaker during the outage.

“This follows a significant increase in DDoS activity experienced by a number of online companies over recent weeks. While the attempt at disruption is ongoing our technical teams were able to restore services last night. We apologize for any inconvenience caused to our customers.”

News site The Register speculated that the 24-hour disruption could have cost William Hill $4.4 million, based on their H1 revenue of £814 million, although since online only accounts for around 33 percent of the company’s revenues, the real figure is likely to be much less.

Article Sources
New York Sports Gambling Choices: Update on 9 Legalized Books editorial policy.
  1. Responsible Gaming Study Finds State Shortcomings in Regulating Sports Betting

Compare Accounts
×
Crown Resorts Faces New Inquiry, Interim Chair Says Company Will Gain Sydney License
Provider
Name
Description
‘Borgata Babes’ Can Move Forward with Gender Discrimination Case, Rules Appeals Court  Caesars Says Bye-Bye to Belle of Baton Rouge, Property Reeg Once Wouldn’t Stay At  Las Vegas Tycoon Sheldon Adelson to Fund President Trump Reelection Campaign  One More Time: Britney Spears to Hit Las Vegas Strip with New Residency at Park MGM  Game of Thrones Finale: How the Bookies Got It Right  Crown Resorts Faces New Inquiry, Interim Chair Says Company Will Gain Sydney License  Wynn Macau Still Bleeding Cash, Forecasts Massive Q1 EBITDA Decline  Poll Finds Adequate Support for St. Tammany Casino Resort in Slidell, La.  Hollywood Casino St. Louis Parking Garage Violent Robber Enters Plea  Kentucky Sports Betting Regulations on Fast Track