On 05/30/04, Sean Donelan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Microsoft now employs 100 people with a budget of $10 million dollars (Ok,
> if you do the math, the average salary is a bit low if they also have
> benefits or any equipment) to track down people attacking Microsoft's
> Hotmail service, onl
Microsoft now employs 100 people with a budget of $10 million dollars (Ok,
if you do the math, the average salary is a bit low if they also have
benefits or any equipment) to track down people attacking Microsoft's
Hotmail service, online fruad, identity theft and spyware. The Direct
Marketing As
Richard Welty [30/05/04 19:57 -0400]:
> # control logging
> SetEnvIf Request_URI "^/default.ida?" dontlog
> SetEnvIf Request_Method "SEARCH" dontlog
Nathan Torkington's vermicide helps - (needs mod_perl)
srs
# this goes into your httpd.conf file
#
# the push_handlers line below prevent
On Sun, 30 May 2004 15:43:58 -0500 "John Palmer (NANOG Acct)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Can anyone identify this http exploit? Seen in the apache logs:
> foo.bar.com
> - - [30/May/2004:02:45:28 -0400] "SEARCH
> /\x90\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\
> x02\
It seems to be another stupid Microsoft Exploit that just causes annoyance
for Unix Boxes. The ones on my boxes seem to be about 32K in size and have
been occurring for the past 2 months or more. The only side effect is they
fill my dmesg logs with signal 11's from apache crashing.
pid 74210 (htt
| Behalf Of John Palmer (NANOG Acct)
| Sent: May 30, 2004 4:44 PM
|
| Can anyone identify this http exploit? Seen in the apache logs:
|
| foo.bar.com
| - - [30/May/2004:02:45:28 -0400] "SEARCH
| /\x90\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\
| x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x0
Can anyone identify this http exploit? Seen in the apache logs:
foo.bar.com
- - [30/May/2004:02:45:28 -0400] "SEARCH
/\x90\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\
x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x02\xb1\x0
Thus spake "Christopher J. Wolff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> This is a great discussion. I'm interested in understanding these types
of
> limitations in the context of HFC cable networks. In my opinion, HDTV
> channel bandwidth (30mhz?) ,
Broadcast ATSC (aka HDTV) uses the same bandwidth as broadcas
RP/0/RP0/CPU0:sl-bb-stk#sh int pos 0/1/0/0
POS0/1/0/0 is up, line protocol is up
Hardware is Packet over SONET
Description: To sl-bbh-sj POS0/2/0/0 OC768 to SL-BB-SJC
Internet address is 144.232.8.30/30
MTU 4474 bytes, BW 39813120 Kbit
reliability 255/255, txload 11/255, rxload 16/25
On Sun, 30 May 2004, Stephen Sprunk wrote:
> This problem has little to do with BE vs. QoS. It's a temporary market
> imbalance caused by providers willing to sell service for less than cost; in
> the absence of external factors, eventually enough providers will go under
> for prices to rise bac
Thus spake "Gordon Cook" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> The point I am making in my report is NOT that the best effort
> network has technology problems but rather that it has ECONOMIC
> PROBLEMS. That it might support 2 or 3 players not 2 or 3 HUNDRED.
> That until companies begin to go chapter seven and
Hi there,
I'm curious to know what tools (in traffic engineering arena) people use
in order to manage and verify their service assurance that they are
providing and / or receiving they think they are.
How do you know the policers are functioning correctly?
How do you know whether your service pr
I don't see the correlation between settlements, profitability and
level-of-service.
-joe
Christopher J. Wolff wrote:
Folks,
This is a great discussion. I'm interested in understanding these types of
limitations in the context of HFC cable networks. In my opinion, HDTV
channel bandwidth (30mhz?) , increased demand for voip, and growing demand
for IP connectivity is going to stress the
Folks,
This is a great discussion. I'm interested in understanding these types of
limitations in the context of HFC cable networks. In my opinion, HDTV
channel bandwidth (30mhz?) , increased demand for voip, and growing demand
for IP connectivity is going to stress the cable network model as we
On May 30, 11:21am, Stefan Mink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> what about persistent route oscillations when you use route reflectors?
> You wouldn't have that problem if you could announce several paths...
Good to see that creativity is still alive and kicking. But, no, that
sounds like a questio
On Fri, May 28, 2004 at 02:37:23PM +0100, Per Gregers Bilse wrote:
> Another issue is that there isn't much point, as far as regular BGP
> and routing considerations go. Whichever is the best path for a border
> router is the best path; telling other routers about paths it will not
> use serves no
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