On 2012-03-20 16:53 , Nick Hilliard wrote:
On 20/03/2012 14:54, Jeroen Massar wrote:
For everybody who is monitoring other people's websites, please please
please, monitor something static like /robots.txt as that can be
statically served and is kinda appropriate as it is intended for robots.
Today I received some notices about Hotmail users who couldn't send e-mail
messages to various receipients due to spamfilters blocking them at the
receiving mailservers. Seems like Microsoft/Hotmail staff forgot to set some
reverse DNS pointer records:
Diagnostic-Code: smtp;450 4.7.1 Client host
Dear All,
is there any open source system you can use to monitor routes and interfaces
availability inside multiple MPLS VRFs
Thanks
thanks guys for your valued information .
On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 11:10 AM, Sherwin Ang sherwin@gmail.com wrote:
I am currently running ASR1006 with ESP20 with 12 full routes and
routing around 12gig of traffic with no issues.
i guess it would depend on the size of traffic that you
Yahoo!'s abuse contact from whois:
OrgAbuseEmail: network-ab...@cc.yahoo-inc.com
now sends an autoresponse that tells you to go to a web form to report
spam:
http://help.yahoo.com/l/us/yahoo/mail/yahoomail/spam.html
but the link doesn't work--it just redirects to a generic Yahoo! help
page
Diagnostic-Code: smtp;450 4.7.1 Client host rejected: cannot find your
reverse hostname, [157.55.1.150]
(Verified this using various public DNS servers, to exclude potential
local
issues)
Anyone here who has proper contacts to give them the clue-bat?
n...@microsoft.com will probably
I know this tactic isn't exactly new .. just thought I'd pass this along.
Text below is exact with exception of our ARIN information and ranges
(which any of you could figure out anyway).
Cheers,
Michael Holstein
Cleveland State University
--snip--
Description: ABC Widgets
*Greetings, NOC or
Hi!
This was mailed to many ISP's the last days.
Bye,
Raymond.
I know this tactic isn't exactly new .. just thought I'd pass this along.
Text below is exact with exception of our ARIN information and ranges
(which any of you could figure out anyway).
Cheers,
Michael Holstein
Cleveland
Michael -
We're aware of several parties out there soliciting to 'lease'
your address space, and it appears that most of them are bulk
email operations. Given that the nearly inevitable consequence
is that the blocks in question end up on various anti-spam
blacklists, I imagine
Hey All,
I have a site in Alabama that could really use some additional
diversity, but apparently ATT fiber is the only game in town.
If anybody has any options, such as fixed wireless in the 10-50mbs,
please reply to me, off-list.
Best,
Joe
At 21-03-2012 15:29, Jason Gurtz wrote:
Diagnostic-Code: smtp;450 4.7.1 Client host rejected: cannot find your
reverse hostname, [157.55.1.150]
(Verified this using various public DNS servers, to exclude potential
local
issues)
Anyone here who has proper contacts to give them the clue-bat?
I don't know about ATT, but Verizon physically removes the copper connections
when they install fiber into a building. Oddly, this is legal. Verizon is
required to open up their copper to CLECs, but not fiber.
The only option at that point is cable or wireless.
-Original Message-
How far? There are a lot of fixed wireless solutions in that space.
Also building your own fiber an option? That distance comes into play as well...
Jared Mauch
On Mar 21, 2012, at 11:44 AM, Joe Maimon jmai...@ttec.com wrote:
Hey All,
I have a site in Alabama that could really use some
n...@microsoft.com will probably understand or at least point you in
the
right direction.
Yeah, tried that, doesn't work. Same for moc@ and soc@
*sigh* quite the frustrating company... looking in my archives I see also
doma...@microsoft.com which I conversed with late may last year. I will
On Wed March 21 2012 10:44, Joe Maimon wrote:
Hey All,
I have a site in Alabama that could really use some additional
diversity, but apparently ATT fiber is the only game in town.
If anybody has any options, such as fixed wireless in the 10-50mbs,
please reply to me, off-list.
Any
- Original Message -
From: Eric Wieling ewiel...@nyigc.com
I don't know about ATT, but Verizon physically removes the copper
connections when they install fiber into a building. Oddly, this is
legal. Verizon is required to open up their copper to CLECs, but not
fiber.
The Verizon
I feel a topic shift coming...
2012/3/21 Jay Ashworth j...@baylink.com
- Original Message -
From: Eric Wieling ewiel...@nyigc.com
I don't know about ATT, but Verizon physically removes the copper
connections when they install fiber into a building. Oddly, this is
legal.
You can get Satellite service as well.
It's really expensive, for the bandwidth, but worth a look if you
don't have any other options.
On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 8:44 AM, Joe Maimon jmai...@ttec.com wrote:
Hey All,
I have a site in Alabama that could really use some additional diversity,
but
mocal...@microsoft.com
Mention Sev1 in your email.
ryan
On Mar 21, 2012, at 1:54 AM, Michiel Klaver mich...@klaver.it wrote:
Today I received some notices about Hotmail users who couldn't send e-mail
messages to various receipients due to spamfilters blocking them at the
receiving
Verizon, the copper wireline company, is removing service from locations EVERY
TIME VZ fiber is installed in a building. This prevents other companies from
providing service by leasing Verizon's copper infrastructure. If there was
copper at a location then VZ would be required to resell it
On 3/21/2012 8:44 AM, Joe Maimon wrote:
Hey All,
I have a site in Alabama that could really use some additional
diversity, but apparently ATT fiber is the only game in town.
If anybody has any options, such as fixed wireless in the 10-50mbs,
please reply to me, off-list.
Best,
Joe
Hello,
I have a small project where I could use someone onsite who has general
working cisco knowledge to help transition a site to new isp and make basic
changes in a cisco router.
Of course this was dropped in my lap with short notice so clients wants it
done asap which in reality is something
I think this highlights a very important aspect of the paid IP address
transfer process - whomever is buying had better perform some due
diligence on the block. These sorts of rent-a-block-for-SPAM activities
are extremely common. Most of the time, they aren't quite this blatant.
- Dan
Have a customer that is having problems webbrowsing and need some
offline assistance from someone at Comcast.
First glance, it looks like a proxy/web accelerator problem at Comcast.
Thanks,
Lyle Giese
LCR Computer Services, Inc.
- Original Message -
From: Eric Wieling ewiel...@nyigc.com
Verizon, the copper wireline company, is removing service from
locations EVERY TIME VZ fiber is installed in a building. This
prevents other companies from providing service by leasing Verizon's
copper infrastructure. If
On 03/21/2012 11:58 AM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Eric Wielingewiel...@nyigc.com
Verizon, the copper wireline company, is removing service from
locations EVERY TIME VZ fiber is installed in a building. This
prevents other companies from providing service by leasing
On 3/21/2012 12:16 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
On 03/21/2012 11:58 AM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Eric Wielingewiel...@nyigc.com
Verizon, the copper wireline company, is removing service from
locations EVERY TIME VZ fiber is installed in a building. This
prevents
On 03/21/2012 12:28 PM, John T. Yocum wrote:
On 3/21/2012 12:16 PM, Michael Thomas wrote:
On 03/21/2012 11:58 AM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Eric Wielingewiel...@nyigc.com
Verizon, the copper wireline company, is removing service from
locations EVERY TIME VZ
-Original Message-
From: Michael Thomas [mailto:m...@mtcc.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 21, 2012 3:16 PM
To: Jay Ashworth
Cc: NANOG
Subject: Re: Verizon, FiOS, and CLEC/UNE orders (was ATT diversity)
On 03/21/2012 11:58 AM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Eric
- Original Message -
From: Michael Thomas m...@mtcc.com
VZ wants to get rid of their copper plant. It's expensive to
maintain, and it requires that they sell service to competitors.
Once they've disconnected their customers from it, they can just
eliminate the copper plant. POTS
On Mar 21, 2012, at 1:54 AM, Michiel Klaver wrote:
Diagnostic-Code: smtp;450 4.7.1 Client host rejected: cannot find your
reverse hostname, [157.55.1.150]
Anyone here who has proper contacts to give them the clue-bat?
I gather the correct eyes are on the problem and it should be resolved
On Wed, 21 Mar 2012 16:00:32 -0400, Jay Ashworth said:
Someone tells me off list that indeed, if the plant isn't *there*, VZN
isn't required to build it.
Now, if that's the case, then they can't adminstratively block *someone
else* from building it, either...
Yes, but it's assymetric. VZN
On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 2:58 PM, Jay Ashworth j...@baylink.com wrote:
Verizon, the copper wireline company, is removing service from
locations EVERY TIME VZ fiber is installed in a building. This
prevents other companies from providing service by leasing Verizon's
copper infrastructure. If
- Original Message -
From: William Herrin bill@her
The hinky part is that the FCC decided that copper pairs are an
unbundled element but PONS wavelengths and Coaxial cable frequency
channels are not. So, Verizon doesn't have to share access to FIOS and
Comcast doesn't have to share
On 3/21/2012 1:56 PM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
- Original Message -
From: William Herrinbill@her
The hinky part is that the FCC decided that copper pairs are an
unbundled element but PONS wavelengths and Coaxial cable frequency
channels are not. So, Verizon doesn't have to share access
On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 5:00 PM, John T. Yocum
john.yo...@fluidhosting.com wrote:
That's probably a local requirement. It's not a Federal requirement. Though,
some cable companies do provide wholesale services even when not required.
Bingo.
On the flip side of the equation, if you want to be
On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 2:28 PM, John T. Yocum
john.yo...@fluidhosting.com wrote:
VZ wants to get rid of their copper plant. It's expensive to maintain, and
As opposed to fiber plant which is indestructible and cheap to maintain?
Well, if VZ owns the copper, if it's not being used to provide a
My understanding was that fiber loops were originally included in UNE products
available to clecs but several years ago the FCC modified the regulations to
remove them.
So, if a service can be provisioned over a copper loop, a clec can offer it,
but the ilec doesn't have to share fiber loops
On Thu, Mar 22, 2012 at 1:32 AM, Michael J Wise mjw...@kapu.net wrote:
I gather the correct eyes are on the problem and it should be resolved
soonest.
Thanks for the heads-up.
Seems fixed
;; ANSWER SECTION:
150.1.55.157.in-addr.arpa. 3600 IN PTR
dub0-omc2-s11.dub0.hotmail.com.
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