Update at foot of post:

According toa tweetfrom WordPress.com, the hosted blogging service is currently suffering a “non-trivial” Distributed Denial of Service attack, causing “Sporadic slowness”.

The downtime is “Multiple Gigabits per second and tens of millions of packets per second” according toan emailsent out to WordPress’ VIP customers. The email says that the company is working to resolve the issues and that VIP customers will be top priority.

Although it is causing slowness rather than downtime, WordPress being under attack is a big deal.Almost 18 million sitesrun on the hosted platform and it’sgrowing fast. 6 million new blogs were added in 2010, and pageviews increased 53%.

The 💜 of EU tech

The latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol' founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It’s free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!

There’s no word on the cause of the DDoS attack as yet. We’ve contacted WordPress.com’s parent company Automattic and will update with more information as it becomes available.

UPDATE:

WordPress’ Matt Mullenweg just sent us the following statement indicating that this is the largest attack the service has been subjected to in its six year history and that it suspect political motives, although this is yet to be confirmed:

“There’s an ongoing DDoS attack that was large enough to impact all three of our datacenters in Chicago, San Antonio, and Dallas — it’s currently been neutralized but it’s possible it could flare up again later, which we’re taking proactive steps to implement.

This is the largest and most sustained attack we’ve seen in our 6 year history. We suspect it may have been politically motivated against one of our non-English blogs but we’re still investigating and have no definitive evidence yet.”

We will update with more information as it becomes available.

Update 2:

Ina tweetfrom the official WordPress account, we’re seeing that things should be back to normal now. Should we hear anything further, we’ll be sure to let you know.

Story byMartin SFP Bryant

Martin SFP Bryant is the founder of UK startup newsletter PreSeed Now and technology and media consultancy Big Revolution. He was previously(show all)Martin SFP Bryant is the founder of UK startup newsletterPreSeed Nowand technology and media consultancyBig Revolution. He was previously Editor-in-Chief at TNW.

Get the TNW newsletter

Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.

Also tagged with