Chinese authorities have arrested a suspect accused of purchasing massive botnet traffic to cripple a local gaming company's servers, highlighting how easily accessible digital cyberweapons have become to settle personal disputes.
The cyber police unit of the Zhengxiang Public Security Bureau in Hunan province took the unnamed suspect into custody on July 10, 2026, following a cross-province tracking operation. The arrest, according to local media reports, capped a multi-week investigation into a severe cyberattack that completely paralyzed the operations of an unnamed gaming firm based in the Zhengxiang district.
According to police reports, the targeted company filed an emergency complaint in June after its website and gaming servers were hit by a relentless Distributed Denial of Service, or DDoS, attack on June 17, 2026. The malicious traffic completely overwhelmed the company’s systems, forcing the servers into a protective "black hole" mode that rendered the gaming software entirely inoperable and brought business operations to a sudden halt.
A dedicated police task force analyzed digital evidence to track the origin of the attack. During interrogation, the suspect confessed to purchasing malicious web traffic to launch the DDoS attack as a retaliatory measure stemming from a personal dispute with the enterprise.
The suspect is currently held under criminal compulsory measures as the investigation continues.
DDoS attacks utilize networks of compromised computers, often called zombie hosts, to flood target servers with fake traffic, exhausting their bandwidth and computing resources. Local cybersecurity units warned that purchasing attack traffic, renting botnets, or operating DDoS platforms remains strictly illegal. The media reports did not reveal if the police were able to hunt down where the suspect purchased the traffic.