Author Topic: Crime Scene Do Not Cross  (Read 6502 times)

all blockheads confirmed as attacker

They seem'd bored, blockheads leave all the time because I d-wand their stuffty spam on the ground. (Red bases with vehicle spawns)

this

>legofish goes afk
>server mysteriously gets DDoSed while he's gone
>close enough to the owner to be a admin on it

I think we have our culprit right here, gentlemen.
I wasnt admin, lol

guys guys
if lego went afk while the ddos happened
then that must mean that lego was doing something...
that something could be the ddos
:OOOO

Lego is not at fault here guys, he was playing with me when it happened.

How do you even know it was a DDoS?

I wasnt admin, lol
oh well forget
so much for that conclusion then.

How do you even know it was a DDoS?

Why are you always so negative and dismissing when I say Its a DDoS?

Why are you always so negative and dismissing when I say Its a DDoS?
Because server downtime is not always a ddos. Maybe your internet was acting up. Maybe too many people were on your server so they disconnected. Maybe it was an error by you.

Maybe your internet was acting up. If it was my  laptop which was connected to wired internet like my PC, would have acted up because I was on a different server with it.
Maybe too many people were on your server so they disconnected. The server had like 5 people last time it happened.

 Maybe it was an error by you.  Please tell me an example

Not trying to be rude with this reply.

If it was my  laptop which was connected to wired internet like my PC, would have acted up because I was on a different server with it.
It's about 99% likely that your laptop and desktop PC use the same external Internet connection. Your desktop is connected to the router with Ethernet, and your laptop is connected to the router with Wi-Fi. Even though these are different link types, both computers use the same ISP. The router and LAN do not affect connection quality much.

The server had like 5 people last time it happened.
What if you had been compressing files or doing other CPU-heavy work? What if the OS needed to do a resource- intensive task?

Why are you always so negative and dismissing when I say Its a DDoS?
How did I dismiss anything or bring negativity?

It's about 99% likely that your laptop and desktop PC use the same external Internet connection. Your desktop is connected to the router with Ethernet, and your laptop is connected to the router with Wi-Fi. Even though these are different link types, both computers use the same ISP. The router and LAN do not affect connection quality much.  I just said I used wired internet not Wifi for my laptop.
What if you had been compressing files or doing other CPU-heavy work? What if the OS needed to do a resource- intensive task? When I host I only run my Dedicated window nothing else, and I have never experienced this happening before so the chance of the OS doing it is 30/100
How did I dismiss anything or bring negativity? Read your post again,   trying to dismiss the fact that it could be DDoS

Helping ducky out here

I just said I used wired internet not Wifi for my laptop
Regardless of if the LAN link is Ethernet or Wi-Fi, the computer is still connected to the outside cable, fiber-optic, DSL, or satellite ISP.

When I host I only run my Dedicated window nothing else, and I have never experienced this happening before so the chance of the OS doing it is 30/100
Unless you log resource usage with Performance Monitor, there's no way to tell if the Blockland server or OS was doing a CPU-heavy task for a few minutes.

Read your post again,   trying to dismiss the fact that it could be DDoS
I was not dismissing that the cause of the downtime was a DDoS. Instead of saying something like "no it's not", I used logic and reasoning.