Comment by safety1st

1 year ago

All fair points but do they apply to the Netlify situation? As I understand it they generally won't hold you liable for resource usage generated by a DDoS, the guy on Reddit said this was a DDoS, the Netlify CEO said the traffic "didn't match attack patterns..." I think telling a free tier customer that they owe $104K was a pretty stupid PR move either way, but we don't really have enough info to say whether this was a DDoS or not

> As I understand it they generally won't hold you liable for resource usage generated by a DDoS

From personal experience as a customer of a cloud provider (not with Netlify btw), usually cloud providers who profit from bandwidth costs will write their TOS in such a way where almost nothing qualifies as a DDoS attack unless it's truly a distributed and targeted large scale attack specifically on your site.

A random person on the internet who spins up a few VPSs around the world and slams your site with looped curl requests won't count as a DDoS attack even though from your perspective that will result in a massive bill increase due to bandwidth costs.

In other words, I'm not surprised "didn't match attack patterns" was used. I'm guessing that will be the case most of the time.