On Tuesday 11 March 2008, Dan Farrell wrote: > On Mon, 10 Mar 2008 22:51:42 +0000 > > Mick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Monday 10 March 2008, Dan Farrell wrote: > > > On Mon, 10 Mar 2008 15:43:55 -0400 > > > > > > Mike Edenfield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > Comcast? > > > > > > I was on comcast for a long time (2.5 yrs) and never had a problem > > > like this. They might have blocked port 25 and squelched my > > > bittorrenting at times, but never anything like this. Of course, > > > ymmv. > > > > IIRC they also block port 80 for sure on their retail accounts. They > > don't want the average punter to run a webserver at home. > > Even when they blocked port 25 for me bidirectionally (evidently > sending 6 gigs through that port made me look like a spammer, even if > it was all to the same address ;) ), and I called security assurance > and they listed that among all the open ports I wasn't allowed on a > residential account, even then, they still didn't block port 80 (or 26, > 22, 21, 110, 993, or any other port!).
Hmm, I don't know . . . The particular address I was trying to connect was definitely blocked. Other than not beeing able to connect with a browser, nc, httping and tcptraceroute confirmed it). Could it be an area/account specific block perhaps? When I questioned the owner he said that this was common practice and that his ISP does not allow webservers to run. -- Regards, Mick
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