Re: Wikipedia drops support for old Android smartphones; mandates TLSv1.2 to read

2019-12-31 Thread DaKnOb
I still don’t see any multi-million dollar donation receipts though.. So if we want to do this, do we sacrifice security for the 99.9% or do we have Wikimedia pay the bill? Oh, BTW, I have some network equipment with only 16-bit ASN support, or no large communities, or no IPv6, or no AES, or n

Contact in ATU

2019-08-07 Thread DaKnOb
Hello, Anyone by any chance has any contact info for ATU in Albania? Any type of contact should probably be fine, from what I’ve seen, not necessarily technical. Thanks, Antonis

Re: Whats going on at Cogent

2018-10-16 Thread DaKnOb
al concept of src-dst flows on those types of > circuits, and if they can’t see your labels, or otherwise hash the traffic, > or it all truly is point to point, you may not get the full bandwidth, or may > need to buy a capacity larger than what the flow will be. > > From: NANOG on

Re: Whats going on at Cogent

2018-10-16 Thread DaKnOb
When I call and mention it I’m told that it’s HE’s fault (despite the lovely cake), but when I also bring Google, then they tell me to get a different provider just for this traffic, or meet them at an IX and send my traffic from there. About the staff rotation I’ve seen it too, and I’ve also s

Re: Is WHOIS going to go away?

2018-04-14 Thread DaKnOb
As far as IP Addresses go (and domains too), currently GDPR recognizes the rights of individuals, not companies, which means that a company can be in the whois query, since it does not have the right to privacy. My understanding is that this will only affect natural persons. > On 14 Apr 2018,

Re: Is WHOIS going to go away?

2018-04-14 Thread DaKnOb
Currently .eu and .gr domains do not have any whois records. .eu makes them available online, but .gr is under a much stricter privacy law in Greece, and makes no whois records available to anyone. This has been so for years, and I can tell you of a few things / observations about this, since

Re: Yet another Quadruple DNS?

2018-03-29 Thread DaKnOb
Cloudflare’s website provides some more information: https://1.1.1.1/ According to Cloudflare’s CEO, we’ll have more news on 1/4, so in a few days. https://twitter.com/eastdakota/status/979257292938911744 From their website I can see that it is a low latency and privacy orient

Re: Yet another Quadruple DNS?

2018-03-28 Thread DaKnOb
Out of 1,000 RIPE Atlas Probes, only 34 report it as unreachable. Very good latency from those who can reach it.. https://atlas.ripe.net/measurements/11859210/#!general Antonis > On 28 Mar 2018, at 23:13, Michael Crapse wrote: > > Man

Re: Microsoft O365 labels nanog potential fraud?

2017-03-29 Thread DaKnOb
Indeed, in more detail (which I omitted for simplicity), these checks are performed in a series of headers, the last of which is the From: header. I think the “envelope-from” is either the first or the second in this 5-point list. That said, there are a lot of implementations out there that do n

Re: Microsoft O365 labels nanog potential fraud?

2017-03-29 Thread DaKnOb
Usually mailing lists act like e-mail spoofers as far as SPF and DKIM is concerned. These two systems above try to minimize spoofed e-mail by doing the following: SPF: Each domain adds a list of IP Addresses that are allowed to send e-mail on their behalf. DKIM: Each email sent by an "origina

Re: Wanted: volunteers with bandwidth/storage to help save climate data

2016-12-16 Thread DaKnOb
ut are 'accused' of being manipulated 'to promote > the climate change agenda' yadda. > > Canada: time to step up! (Cant imagine the Natl Research Council would do so > on their mirror site, too much of a gloves-off slap in the face to Trump.) > > /kc > &

Re: Wanted: volunteers with bandwidth/storage to help save climate data

2016-12-16 Thread DaKnOb
If you’re interested, there’s also a Slack team: climatemirror.slack.com You can find more info about that here: - https://climate.daknob.net/ - http://climatemirror.org/ - http://www.ppehlab.org/datarefuge Thank you for your help! > On 16 Dec 2016, at 17:58, Rich Kulawiec wrote: > > This is

Re: Krebs on Security booted off Akamai network after DDoS attack proves pricey

2016-09-23 Thread DaKnOb
Well, there’s always Cloudflare and Google that are willing to do it for free. Let’s hope we won’t run out of free providers any time soon.. It’s a nice blog. > On 23 Sep 2016, at 20:58, Grant Ridder wrote: > > Didn't realize Akamai kicked out or disabled customers > http://www.zdnet.com/artic

Re: DNS Services for a registrar

2016-08-12 Thread DaKnOb
> On 12 Aug 2016, at 18:36, Keith Stokes wrote: > > Route53 can get expensive for lots of domains. Queries are cheap with the > first 1M free, but if you have 1000 domains you’ll pay $500/month. > > You can build dedicated servers in multiple AZs and data centers able to > handle that many d

Re: DNS Services for a registrar

2016-08-12 Thread DaKnOb
Someone registered the domain “corp.gr” and now sells subdomains similar to .com.gr, .co.uk, etc. They use a “clever” way to make sure they will have 100% uptime at virtually no cost: $ dig NS corp.gr ;; Truncated, retrying in TCP mode. ; <<>> DiG 9.8.3-P1 <<>> NS corp.gr ;; global options: +cm