It all depends on who the ISP uses. There could be one ISP using UUNet and another using Sprint.Originally posted by: mcveigh
anyone know how to figure out who is the major carrier in your area?, who is the biggest backbone provider? I live in the tampa bay area.
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Originally posted by: N8Magic
Me neither.Originally posted by: RossMAN
Originally posted by: Lars
http://webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?s=&threadid=107128
Damn I can't even access that WHT thread.![]()
Who could/would put on such an attack of this scale?
Literally bringing half the world's internet to it's knees, whoa.
Originally posted by: snooker
I was just now able to reconnect to the net.
My ISP has been down since like 2am EST this morning. It was affecting their login servers (At least it was giving me an invalid UN and PW). It is still running pretty slow..... especially UUNet from what I can tell.
Originally posted by: VBboy
Nah, man, I had to please my girlfriend on my way to the kitchenOriginally posted by: Insane3DHey...it took you almost 3 hours to get to your kitchen and turn that thing off??? Damn...you must have a big house!Originally posted by: VBboy I turned off my DDOS appliance in the kitchen. Service should be restoring as we speak![]()
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Originally posted by: CorporateRecreation
Don't blame microsoft too hard, almost every platform has programs with buffer overflow errors. You only see the Microsoft servers get hit because they are the most popular platform, and they are easy to target. Buffer overflow is a VERY common thing, and it just so happens that MS's SQL is the target this time. If you run a MS Server, look out. Personally I am glad both my servers run unix.
Originally posted by: element®
Originally posted by: CorporateRecreation
Don't blame microsoft too hard, almost every platform has programs with buffer overflow errors. You only see the Microsoft servers get hit because they are the most popular platform, and they are easy to target. Buffer overflow is a VERY common thing, and it just so happens that MS's SQL is the target this time. If you run a MS Server, look out. Personally I am glad both my servers run unix.
No I don't blame Microshaft for this. I blame them for making it difficult for me to uninstall Windows Messupinger on my WinXP box. EAT IT MS!
Btw I uninstalled it eventually but what a pain.
Start > RunOriginally posted by: KK
Theres a script to do that? Can you provide a linky? Thanks
KK
Originally posted by: KK
Theres a script to do that? Can you provide a linky? Thanks
KK
Originally posted by: Nemesis77
Maybe MS should be banned from the Internet? I mean, look at the harm their software brings: IIS-servers are routinely hacked and defaced, thanks to MS SQL-server, Internet has slowed to a crawl and several root-servers are offline, Outlook spreads viruses faster than the eye can see, Hotmail is a spam-magnet, Code Red, Nimda etc. etc...
Originally posted by: pulse8
Originally posted by: Nemesis77
Maybe MS should be banned from the Internet? I mean, look at the harm their software brings: IIS-servers are routinely hacked and defaced, thanks to MS SQL-server, Internet has slowed to a crawl and several root-servers are offline, Outlook spreads viruses faster than the eye can see, Hotmail is a spam-magnet, Code Red, Nimda etc. etc...
If it wasn't Microsoft, it'd only be someone else's software.
Originally posted by: pulse8
Originally posted by: Nemesis77
Maybe MS should be banned from the Internet? I mean, look at the harm their software brings: IIS-servers are routinely hacked and defaced, thanks to MS SQL-server, Internet has slowed to a crawl and several root-servers are offline, Outlook spreads viruses faster than the eye can see, Hotmail is a spam-magnet, Code Red, Nimda etc. etc...
If it wasn't Microsoft, it'd only be someone else's software.
Originally posted by: SnapIT
Originally posted by: pulse8
Originally posted by: Nemesis77
Maybe MS should be banned from the Internet? I mean, look at the harm their software brings: IIS-servers are routinely hacked and defaced, thanks to MS SQL-server, Internet has slowed to a crawl and several root-servers are offline, Outlook spreads viruses faster than the eye can see, Hotmail is a spam-magnet, Code Red, Nimda etc. etc...
If it wasn't Microsoft, it'd only be someone else's software.
You mean like the systems that are used twice as often as MS systems today? (only counting servers)
Obviously MS servers are are more vunerable to attacks... (or it's the people who uses the other systems that are more alert)
I thought I was the only one who noticed!!! :QOriginally posted by: mechBgon
Did anyone notice that this attack coincided very closely with the addition of the Clown avatar? :Q