By Harry McCracken | Friday, March 26, 2010 at 12:02 am
Weird: Line 2, which I wrote enthusiastically about earlier today, is now suffering a denial-of-service attack (chronicled on parent company Toktumi’s Twitter feed). The app is currently missing from the iPhone App Store, which gave me a scare: There are multiple other examples of programs you’d think Apple might have a problem with hitting the store, attracting attention, and then getting yanked by Apple. (Here’s one.) But Toktumi founder Peter Sisson told me that the company pulled the app itself so that new users wouldn’t start off with a bad experience during the attack.
As I write this, the attack has been going on for at least six hours. I’m still looking forward to trying Line2 once it’s back.
[…] Line2 Goes Down – Technologizer […]
[…] Line2 service is temporarily offline and the app has been voluntarily pulled from the App Store; as Technologizer reports, the company’s servers are being targeted by a DNS attack, and the service quality was […]
[…] Line2 service is temporarily offline and the app has been voluntarily pulled from the App Store; as Technologizer reports, the company's servers are being targeted by a DNS attack, and the service quality was degraded to […]
[…] Line2 service is temporarily offline and the app has been voluntarily pulled from the App Store; as Technologizer reports, the company's servers are being targeted by a DNS attack, and the service quality was degraded to […]
[…] Line2 service is temporarily offline and the app has been voluntarily pulled from the App Store; as Technologizer reports, the company’s servers are being targeted by a DNS attack, and the service quality was […]
[…] a Line2 use is at a moment offline as well as a app has been willingly pulled from a App Store; as Technologizer reports, a company’s servers have been being targeted by a DNS attack, as well as a use peculiarity […]
[…] Line2 service is temporarily offline and the app has been voluntarily pulled from the App Store; as Technologizer reports, the company’s servers are being targeted by a DNS attack, and the service quality was […]
[…] Line2 service is temporarily offline and the app has been voluntarily pulled from the App Store; as Technologizer reports, the company's servers are being targeted by a DNS attack, and the service quality was degraded […]
[…] all: Oneliners Neat iPhone VoIP service Line2 has recovered from the denial-of-service attack that crippled it yesterday night–but just to be cautious, it’s still holding off on letting new subscribers sign up. […]
[…] Line2 Goes Down Weird: Line 2, which I wrote enthusiastically about earlier today, is now suffering a denial-of-service attack […] […]
[…] limitations, debuted, got a glowing review from the New York Times’ David Pogue, and then had severe problems registering new users, at least in part because of a weird denial-of-service attack. Line2 publisher Toktumi pulled the […]
March 26th, 2010 at 12:20 am
Yes, just to confirm we did pull Line2 from the App Store until the DNS attack is completely defeated. The last thing we want is to provide a bad user experience so we have chosen to pull the app until we know everything is working normal. We will provide more details on the DNS attack once we track down the perpetrators.
March 26th, 2010 at 1:35 am
Who would benefit most by the DNS attack on Toktumi? AT&T, Skype, iCall, Google voice? How about Cellphone industry association? They could’ve paid some hackers to initiate the DNS attack.
March 26th, 2010 at 3:36 am
That was my thought exactly as I read this.
March 26th, 2010 at 4:38 am
Skype for iPhone already does most of what line2 does for less than half the price. Line2 is over priced at $15 per month. I’m interested in sign up for Line2 only if Toktumi lower their price.
March 26th, 2010 at 5:50 am
I cant wait for this to go back up, I have two phones right now a personal and business. I would love to have this for my business line, save the business money and space in my pocket. I think 15 is a fine amount for this service, if it keeps them profitable, improving their product so I have a better experience then I’m all for it.
March 26th, 2010 at 9:07 am
So what happens to calls to your “Line2” during these DNS attacks?
Whether you consider $15 / month to be a good deal, fair, or overpriced, the real issue brought about by this is that of reliability… If it is not reliable, forget it.