Thanks for that feedback on Google’s Safe Browsing Alerts.  We’ll have to see 
how that works out for us over time.

 

In regards to ShadowServer, I don’t think they’re randomly scanning networks, 
and neither are folks like OpenResolver – I think it’s pretty systematic, 
albeit from perhaps only a certain point of view on the Internet.  If their 
scans are being dropped and logged, that’s great – that means someone has 
measures in place to mitigate attacks that leverage those UDP protocols.   But 
for those who use their output to better secure their own and clients’ endpoint 
devices, it’s much appreciated.  If it’s really just a drop in the ocean, what 
does it matter to you?

 

Frank

 

From: Joe [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, January 12, 2015 10:39 AM
To: Frank Bulk
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Google's Safe Browsing Alerts for Network Administrators

 

 

I've not found it very usefull. As for Shadowserver.org I really wish folks 
trying to save the internet from mis-configurations would stop randomly 
scanning networks to fix. These folks are one of many "do-gooders" that are 
adding to the traffic being dropped and logged. Its only contibuting to the 
daily clutter of problem folk already poking and prodding. 

 

Regards,

-Joe


 

On Thu, Jan 8, 2015 at 5:54 PM, Frank Bulk <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Reply via email to