Much like your banning of an email address is an ability you have with your
provider (gmail), you should have the same abilities with your cellular
provider for an IP address.
I would think (at a minimum) you would be able to negotiate such an action
with them, perhaps it is time to re-negotiate
And just like deploying IoT devices in vehicles without proper security
preparations will lead you to a C network … just saying the hammer swings
both ways here and getting a IP reported isn’t going to do you any damn good at
ALL.
Personally I’d rip those IoT vehicles off the market for a
Let's assume that I submitted an abuse report on your behalf. I'm not going
to do it on behalf of my company; I'm not seeing this issue. So I'd have to
do it in a personal capacity.
Who do I report it to? Let's say my ISP is Charter, and my cell provider is
AT Reporting to either one would not
Sorry wasn’t meant directly aimed at you… unless you are the same person \?
> On Feb 5, 2021, at 09:12, J. Hellenthal wrote:
>
> And just like deploying IoT devices in vehicles without proper security
> preparations will lead you to a C network … just saying the hammer swings
> both ways here
This is an automated weekly mailing describing the state of the Internet
Routing Table as seen from APNIC's router in Japan.
The posting is sent to APOPS, NANOG, AfNOG, SANOG, PacNOG, SAFNOG
TZNOG, MENOG, BJNOG, SDNOG, CMNOG, LACNOG and the RIPE Routing WG.
Daily listings are sent to
WebOS implemented IPv6 in 3.8 IIRC.
Owen
> On Jan 22, 2021, at 15:30 , Doug Barton wrote:
>
> The KB indicates that the problem is with the "LG TV WebOS 3.8 or above."
>
> Doug
>
> (not speaking for any employers, current or former)
>
>
> On 1/22/21 12:42 PM, Mark Andrews wrote:
>> Disney
At the bottom of that page, there is a question “Was this answer helpful.” I
clicked NO. It gave me a free form text box to explain why I felt it was not
helpful… Here’s what I typed:
The advice is just bad and the facts are incorrect.
IPv6 is not blocking the Disney application. Either IPv6 is
His example may have included incompetence. However, it takes longer, but
it is definitely possible to run out of RFC-1918 space with scale and no
incompetence.
No rational network will ever be able to put every single /32 endpoint on a
host, but
I know of several networks that have come darn
Who thought that doing a routine maintenance that covers a whole business day
during a pandemic stay at home order was a better option than doing it, say, I
don’t know, at midnight on Sunday for example?
This is the message right now on Comcast status webpage
“Internet unavailable
We're
> On Jan 21, 2021, at 14:22 , Randy Bush wrote:
>
>>> I’m sure we all remember Y2k (well, most of us, there could be some
>>> young-uns on the list). That day was happening whether we wanted it to
>>> or not. It was an unchangeable, unmovable deadline.
>>
>> but i thought 3gpp was gong to
Please contact off list. Looking to understand the competitive landscape. I
used to live there, but it was over ten years ago. Particularly in commercial
flexible and nimble players with unique physical assets like rights of way
diverse to the usual suspects.
Best,
Roderick.
Roderick Beck
Please accept our apologies for the wording of that notice. I looked at the
ticket and it is emergency unplanned physical network repair. I appreciate your
patience as a customer and am happy to provide further info or assistance if
you’d like (just ping me off-list).
Jason
From: NANOG on
Hi Joe & Joe,
I’m not sure which Joe is the original Joe anymore, but I like this reply
better than the previous one.
It feels more informative and more useful to the community.
I just stumbled on this article.
Owen,
I am genuinely curious, how would you explain the problem, and describe
a solution, to an almost exclusively non-technical audience who just
wants to get the bits flowing again?
Doug
(still not speaking for anyone other than myself)
On 2/5/21 2:25 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
At the bottom
On Fri, 05 Feb 2021 17:25:34 -0800, Doug Barton said:
> I am genuinely curious, how would you explain the problem, and describe
> a solution, to an almost exclusively non-technical audience who just
> wants to get the bits flowing again?
"The people who did Disney's software wrote it for the
ROTFL! I’m sorry, but the imagery of people paying rent for a piece of Randy’s
mind is just too much :)
> On Jan 21, 2021, at 14:22 , Randy Bush wrote:
>
>>> I’m sure we all remember Y2k (well, most of us, there could be some
>>> young-uns on the list). That day was happening whether we wanted
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