2000-06-22, at 22:31:06, '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' wrote:

> Check this out:

> http://www.floridatoday.com/news/business/stories/2000/jun/bus062100b.htm

> Excerpts:

> Harris Corp.'s Web site disappeared from the Internet Monday and Tuesday,
> after an apparent hacker attack rerouted visitors to an unrelated site that
> was still under construction. 
> Baker said the problem started when an unknown person e-mailed Network
> Solutions Inc., which maintains a directory for Internet addresses,
> instructing the Herndon, Va.-based company to reroute all traffic from the
> www.harris.com <http://www.harris.com> domain to a site maintained by
> myinternet.com, another Internet domain registration company. 
> ----

> Apparently in this day and age, sending e-mail is considered hacking!  I
> must be an old-sk00l hax0r th3n, since I started sending e-mail sometime
> around 1991 through my 3133t WW1V BBS.

> I advise that all list members block port 25 until these malicious hackers
> can be brought to justice.  Turn off sendmail, qmail, postfix, or whatever
> you run, don't allow services that hax0rs can exploit.

> Oh, look!  I just hacked the qmail list, by sending e-mail to it!

> :)


Oh... I wouldn't be so smart....
I know few situations from NetSol and their management system.
I can even say that every man with good head to whois'es can do sth
bad to NetSol'ed domains.
And you don't have to use e-mails. Just play few minutes with NetSol
WHOIS database.... catch its' bad points....

well, I will not talk more about it. There is a big affair around
NetSol. For more comments please look at Registers' mailing lists.

-- 
pozdrawiam,
Sylwester S. Biernacki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Reply via email to