On 08/30/2018 11:56 AM, James Knott via talk wrote:
On 08/30/2018 11:45 AM, Scott Allen via talk wrote:
But what if you *don't* know someone lives at 1234 Bloor St. (and most
of the residences on Bloor St. are vacant)?
That doesn't stop many burglars or squatters.
If you knock on one of the doors (ping), you
may get an answer, telling you that breaking into that residence at a
later time may be of some value, thus worth more effort.
There are other ways to determine if there's a computer or router
there. For example traceroute will simply time out if the device
doesn't respond, but there is a route to it. If there is no route to
it, you get a different error message. That difference will tell you
whether there's likely something at that address.
There are other ICMP messages that can be used for probing like
timestamp(msg-13).
All around all disabling ping does for you is to make it harder for your
ISP or IT support people to see if you are having network problems and
the really really stupid script kiddies trying to probe you.
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Alvin Starr || land: (905)513-7688
Netvel Inc. || Cell: (416)806-0133
[email protected] ||
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