Microsoft’s main Web site was unreachable for almost two hours on Friday as the Web server it is hosted on failed following a denial of service attack, the company said Friday.Microsoft’s main Web site was unreachable for almost two hours on Friday as the Web server it is hosted on failed following a denial of service attack, the company said Friday.“I can confirm a DOS attack on the Microsoft.com Web site. It started at 1.21 p.m. Pacific time and lasted for roughly one hour and forty minutes,” a Microsoft spokesman said. “We have reported this to the appropriate federal law enforcement authorities and they are investigating this particular attack.”The denial of service was caused by “a malicious load of site requests,” the spokesman said, but Microsoft has yet not determined where the attack originated or who could be behind it. However, the company has determined that its site did not go down as a result of a software flaw, nor was a flaw in any Microsoft product involved in staging the attack, the spokesman said. “This is not a Microsoft software issue,” he said. The attack hit only the Microsoft.com Web site, and other Microsoft Web properties such as MSN, Hotmail and MSNBC were not affected, the spokesman said.Microsoft’s Web site is one of the most popular targets for attack on the Web and has suffered outages in the past. The company’s site has also been attacked by exploiting unpatched software holes in Microsoft’s own server software. Microsoft did quite well fielding this attack, as sites typically go down for a longer period of time, according to Eric Siegel, principal Internet analyst at Web performance management services firm Keynote Systems.“Usually DOS attacks are more catastrophic. Microsoft’s performance in this attack was quite good,” he said. “Microsoft has gotten better at fending off DOS attacks. I can see that the Microsoft systems were trying to recover. They were fighting. A couple of years ago these attacks were longer and the system would collapse completely.”Microsoft.com is part of Keynote’s Business 40 index, which tracks performance and availability of what Keynote considers the 40 most important and well-connected business Web sites in the U.S. Data is collected from 25 major U.S. metropolitan areas and various Internet backbone providers.Paul Roberts of the IDG News Service contributed to the story. Related content news Broadcom to lay off over 1,200 VMware employees as deal closes The closing of VMware’s $69 billion acquisition by Broadcom will lead to layoffs, with 1,267 VMware workers set to lose their jobs at the start of the new year. By Jon Gold Dec 01, 2023 3 mins Technology Industry Mergers and Acquisitions news analysis Cisco joins $10M funding round for Aviz Networks' enterprise SONiC drive Investment news follows a partnership between the vendors aimed at delivering an enterprise-grade SONiC offering for customers interested in the open-source network operating system. By Michael Cooney Dec 01, 2023 3 mins Network Management Software Network Management Software Network Management Software news Cisco CCNA and AWS cloud networking rank among highest paying IT certifications Cloud expertise and security know-how remain critical in building today’s networks, and these skills pay top dollar, according to Skillsoft’s annual ranking of the most valuable IT certifications. Demand for talent continues to outweigh s By Denise Dubie Nov 30, 2023 7 mins Certifications Certifications Certifications news Mainframe modernization gets a boost from Kyndryl, AWS collaboration Kyndryl and AWS have expanded their partnership to help enterprise customers simplify and accelerate their mainframe modernization initiatives. By Michael Cooney Nov 30, 2023 4 mins Mainframes Cloud Computing Data Center Podcasts Videos Resources Events NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe