Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

SecurityWeekSecurityWeek

Network Security

Record-Breaking DDoS Attack Peaks at 22 Tbps and 10 Bpps

The attack was aimed at a European network infrastructure company and it has been linked to the Aisuru botnet.

DDoS attack

Web performance and security company Cloudflare reported on Tuesday that its systems blocked another record-breaking distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack.

The latest record-breaking attack peaked at 22.2 terabits per second (Tbps) and 10.6 billion packets per second (Bpps), and lasted only 40 seconds. 

The company said this hyper-volumetric DDoS attack, which was double in size compared to the previous record, was autonomously blocked by its systems.

Cloudflare told SecurityWeek that the attack was aimed at a single IP address of an unnamed European network infrastructure company.

Cloudflare has yet to determine who was behind the attack, but believes it may have been powered by the Aisuru botnet, which was also linked earlier this year to a massive 6.3 Tbps attack on the website of cybersecurity blogger Brian Krebs.

Aisuru has been around for more than a year. The botnet is powered by hacked IoT devices such as routers and DVRs that have been compromised through the exploitation of known and zero-day vulnerabilities. 

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

According to Cloudflare, the 22 Tbps attack was traced to over 404,000 unique source IPs across over 14 ASNs worldwide. “Based on internal analysis using a proprietary system, the source IPs were not spoofed,” the company explained. 

The security firm described it as a UDP carpet bomb attack targeting an average of 31,000 destination ports per second, with a peak of 47k ports, all of a single IP address.

Cloudflare revealed in July that the number of DDoS attacks it blocked in the first half of 2025 had already exceeded all the attacks mitigated in 2024.

Related: ShadowV2 DDoS Service Lets Customers Self-Manage Attacks

Related: ‘MadeYouReset’ HTTP2 Vulnerability Enables Massive DDoS Attacks

Related: Record-Breaking 7.3 Tbps DDoS Attack Targets Hosting Provider

Written By

Eduard Kovacs (@EduardKovacs) is senior managing editor at SecurityWeek. He worked as a high school IT teacher before starting a career in journalism in 2011. Eduard holds a bachelor’s degree in industrial informatics and a master’s degree in computer techniques applied in electrical engineering.

Daily Briefing Newsletter

Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing for the latest cybersecurity threats, trends, and expert insights.

Trending

Daily Briefing Newsletter

Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing to stay informed on the latest threats, trends, and technology, along with insightful columns from industry experts.

Join this live webinar as we break down why email-layer defenses alone can't keep pace with the modern phishing ecosystem, how agentic AI is changing the capacity equation for security teams, and more.

Register

This year's summit will help organizations learn how to utilize tools, controls, and design models needed to properly secure cloud environments. Interact with leading solution providers and other end users facing similar challenges in securing a variety of cloud deployments.

Register

People on the Move

Mark Carter has been appointed Chief Information Security Officer at Socure.

Spektrum Labs has named Mark Cravotta Chief Operating Officer.

Philip Martin has joined Uber as Chief Information Security Officer.

More People On The Move

Expert Insights

Four decades of incident response experience suggest that exploits are often the symptom, not the root cause, of today’s cybersecurity failures.

Daily Briefing Newsletter

Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing to stay informed on the latest cybersecurity news, threats, and expert insights. Unsubscribe at any time.