Primarily, HOIC has been designed as a stress testing tool and can be lawfully used as such to stress test local networks and servers provided the person initiating the test has authorization to test and as long as no other networks, servers, clients, networking equipment or URLs are disrupted. HOIC can also be used to perform distributed denial-of-service attacks, which are illegal under various statutes. The
Police and Justice Act 2006 of
the United Kingdom amended the
Computer Misuse Act 1990, and specifically outlawed denial-of-service attacks and set a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. In the United States, denial-of-service attacks may be considered a federal crime under the
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act with penalties that include up to ten years of imprisonment. In 2013
criminal charges were brought against 13 members of
Anonymous for participating in a DDoS attack against various websites of organizations including the Recording Industry Association of America, the Motion Picture Association of America, the United States Copyright Office of the Library of Congress, Visa, MasterCard, and Bank of America. They were charged with one count of "conspiracy to intentionally cause damage to a protected computer" for the events that occurred between September 16, 2010 and January 2, 2011. DDoS attacks are federal offenses in the United States and are prosecuted by the
Department of Justice under
USC Title 18, Section 1030. In 2013,
Anonymous petitioned the United States government via
We the People, demanding that DDoS attacks be recognized as a form of virtual protest similar to
Occupy protests. == Countermeasures ==