Hey!
New message, please read <http://blueappledistributionhub.com/weather.php?nuef>
Sven Olaf Kamphuis
---
El software de antivirus Avast ha analizado este correo electrónico en busca de
virus.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus
olete junk.
end-to-end PI is the way to go.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB LLTC.
=
Address: C/O German Embassy of the Republic CyberBunker
Koloniestrasse 34
D-13359 Registration:
we also should have expanded the ASN to minimum 64 bits at the time it was
expanded to 32 bit for exactly the same reason btw.
there -are- some technical reasons why /64's would be practical as
"end-site" stuff, and if we want to be able to make all those end site
networks independant, we'd ne
well... we actually intend to just announce /64's and smaller as well.
i don't see the problem with that.
just get routers with enough memory...
i'm rather for a "specification" of a minimum supported route-size (let's
say something along the lines of 64GB in each border router, it's 2012
aft
Are there any providers that target someone with my desires? What
providers do NANOG folks use for their _personal_ needs?
none at all, we choose NOT to make ourselves dependant on external
suppliers as far as posibble and this includes NOT having SSL which is
lacky in encryption, as well as
rfid scanner for billing through the datacenter bill with your access
card. (which is linked to your customer id anyway ;)
On Fri, 17 Feb 2012, George Bakos wrote:
Key features required:
Running an OS that can be patched/updated by someone other than the
machine vendor
Deployment in a screen
My ideal vending machine would dispense Cat5e by the foot, the more you
pull the more you pay, RJ45 plugs in pairs, and a crimp tool on a long
chain (like the way you buy chain in a hardware store)
Aled
except for that -usually- when you -need- the crimp tool, you only know at
which position
7 - compressed air can to clean dust
dust?!?!? sounds like time to find a whole new colo and move
everything out of there haha.
i've -never- encountered one with dust in it.
that stuff usually gets sucked out before it gets the idea to land on
anything should it even get in in the first pla
I still long for the day when someone makes a true 16550 based USB to serial
adapter... Some of the stuff I need to reprogram at the shop at times does
not like the cheapie chips that are most common - I've bricked an APC
network manager card at least once for that specific reason...
says
missing? That's bad. If not, can you reach the route? Try this radical
command that was invented by Steve Jobs while working on his first IPhone
(They won't know who Vint Cerf or anyone else is and by using Steves name
they will trust you)(I run Android):
telnet 1.2.3.4 1433
What? It answered?
there is, you can have a pci-bridge or isa-bridge on usb... and then have
a normal rs232 card in it *grin*
so far for wintendo :P
(yes it does understand the concept of having a usb-connected pci
interface :P
On Fri, 17 Feb 2012, Jens Link wrote:
Leo Bicknell writes:
USB->Serial adapter
or you just use your datacenter access rfid pass to pay and they put it on
the bill later on.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE26726
if a pop doesn't come with a hotel with a bar in front of the door,
or at least around the corner, and preferably free beer, coffee, etc in
the cantina as well, we're not a customer of theirs haha.
headace tables are good..
but then again, with noise protectors you would not get the headace in
On Fri, 17 Feb 2012, Erik Soosalu wrote:
1) Patch cables every 1' length from 3-10'
2) Velcro wrap
3) Tools (screwdrivers, etc)
And since the racks usually come with the cage nuts, maybe the colo should just
provide them.
they do? nonono, you have to buy those seperately :P
racks don't eve
noise/ear protectors!
On Fri, 17 Feb 2012, Leigh Porter wrote:
On 17 Feb 2012, at 18:37, "Jay Ashworth" wrote:
Please post your top 3 favorite components/parts you'd like to see in a
vending machine at your colo; please be as specific as possible; don't
let vendor specificity scare you off
to set things up
without preparation.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE267268209
D-13359 Registration:HRA 42834
ever other stuff people generally forget and then decide to steal
out of our racks so we have to drive to the home depot kinda thing again.
(don't ask ;)
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Addr
On Fri, 17 Feb 2012, Jens Link wrote:
Mathias Wolkert writes:
Autoneg. The old timers that don't trust it after a few decades of
decent code. Or those that lock one side and expect the other to adjust
to that.
you are referring to ehh *kuch* certain internet exchanges *kuch* ? :P
auto mdi
wasn't tv already tackled by dvb-iptv + multicast (oh wait, multicast,
that stuff that hardly ever globally works on ipv4 ;)
(yes, i'm that old that i even know what a tv was ;)
On Fri, 17 Feb 2012, Eugen Leitl wrote:
On Fri, Feb 17, 2012 at 10:33:12AM -0500, Jay Ashworth wrote:
- Origin
There is no legitimate reason for a user to use BitTorrent (someone
will probably disagree with this).
There is no democratic basis -for- copy"right", so far for "legitimate".
we have something exitig happening at telx! we are now connected to the
"backbone" through a 128kbit/s adsl line!
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34
needless to say their own website is slow as poo through a coffee filter
:P
reminds me of the isdn days :P
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Ta
\o/ i got one too, i'll put a bunch of sales droids on this "George" from
telx right away to make him an offer in return *grin*
(this is how you treat ppl trying to sell you something in an aggressive
manner, you just have your people try to sell -them- something in return
;)
On Fri, 17 Feb
the latest models we found units weighing 110 kilos *grin*
i'm not lifting -that- up.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE2672682
agent retard of ICE put all those domains back nao pls :P
you know the ones that say "seized" (must be american english for "we
don't care about the souvereignity of other countries and confiscate
assets of their citizens nontheless ;)
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
I was once advising a client on a transit purchasing decision, and a
fairly-large, now-defunct tier-2 ISP was being considered. We needed
a few questions about their IPv6 plans answered before we were
comfortable. The CTO of that org was the only guy who was able to
answer these questions. Aft
On Thu, 16 Feb 2012, Jerry Jones wrote:
I have been scoring paper back VERY lightly near one end with razor knife, then
peeling off.
sounds like something that increases the time it takes to make and put one
single label on by 500%
Once upon a time, Bryan Irvine said:
And watch for the removable faceplates.
you mean you actually leave those things on there? :P
*grin*
readable
label with the mac addresses, serial console enabled at 9600n81 with
portsharing with the bmc SOL, and pxe and wol enabled --
who do these manufacturers think they're selling to anyway, people that
buy just one unit and have all day to install it or what?
Greetings,
Sven
you actually can do that from linux, integrate it into your
installer/imaging code and you're set ;)
just that dell seems to be the only one who has given this some thought ;)
but hey, you can just buy usb "photoframe" keychains, put the service-id
number in a jpeg image, store it on there, an
off" after a while, then gets blown away,
potentially ending up in a ventilator etc.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE267268209
onsider
other options besides "using the hardware that's allready there and owned
by the customer (and full of virusses and spyware ;)"
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Kolon
That's why I recommend that banks et.al. don't put *any* URLs in their
messages. If they make this an explicit policy and pound it into the
heads of their customers that ANY message containing a URL is not from
them, and that they should always use their bookmarks to get to the
bank's site, then
as if it wasn't annoying enough already that some n00bs are using URI's
with characters you can't type in (and in most cases don't even display
correctly), icann has a better idea! hostnames you can't type in!
all those struggeling regimes that want to keep local control over our
internets are
yes, domain names that cannot be typed in with any keyboard/charset on any
computer out there, excellent idea, devide and conquerer, i wonder who
came up with that idiotic plan again, probably the ITU or one of their
infiltrants in icann.
how about, we simply don't code any software or adjust
Stop paying transit providers for delivering spoofed packets to the edge of
your network and they will very quickly develop methods of proving that the
traffic isn't spoofed, or block it altogether. =)
-Drew
yes, very smart idea... which makes it completely impossible to have
multihomed ne
obably has plenty ;)
also an option (for cisco)...
int gix/x/x
max-reserved-bandwidth 1
(i'd say, 1% of 10ge should about cover all the needs for inband layer-2
related stuff as a few kbit/s already should suffice ;)
1% being the minimum you can set this to.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamph
It also isn't as widely supported as it should be. I never said DDOS was
hopeless, there just aren't a wealth of defenses against it.
there is a fix for it, it's called "putting a fuckton of ram in -most-
routers on the internet" and keeping statistics for each destination
ip:destination port:
the way of the dinosaur (already ;)
On Sat, 24 Dec 2011, Sven Olaf Kamphuis wrote:
it only breaks the auto configure crap which you don't want to use anyway.
(unless you want to have any computer on your network be able to tell any
other computer "oh hai i'm a router, plea
te table ;)
we use all kinds of things from /126'es to /112 (but hardly any /64 crap)
works perfectly fine.
as long as its nibble aligned (for other reasons ;)
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
===
tleneck ;)
we don't use /24's for -everything- on ipv4 now do we :P
(oh wait, there once was a time where we did.. due to another retarded
semi-automatic configuration thingy, called RIP , which also only seemed
to understand /24 or bigger ;)
--
Greetin
protocol without a friends list, as far as i'm concerned, it's
dead and replaced by skype ages ago.
we expect this matter to be resolved.
until that time, we advise everyone not to resolve spamhaus'es
blocklists, as clearly, 99% of it, is just there to attempt to blackmail.
-
On Thu, 25 Nov 2010, Bjørn Mork wrote:
Joakim Aronius writes:
* Suresh Ramasubramanian (ops.li...@gmail.com) wrote:
This isnt new - there have been proposals elsewhere for a resolver
based blacklist of child porn sites.
Swedish ISPs are required to enforce a DNS blacklist for childporn,
pe
I've had a recent experience of this. Some IPv6 CPE I was
testing had a fault where it dropped out and recovered every 2 minutes
- a transient network fault. I was watching a youtube video over IPv6.
Because of the amount of video buffering that took place, and because
the same IPv6 prefixes were
lets just say that its easier to have a linux box bridge/route between
ethernet and token ring than it is to get ethernet nics for your as/400's
and other old stuff.
you recently converted from token ring to ethernet? i had no idea there
was still token ring networks out there, or am i liv
s and PUs...the
horror...the horror..
On Nov 2, 2010, at 3:59 PM, Sven Olaf Kamphuis wrote:
doesn't most of SMS (the crap on GSM's) also run on x.25?
i recall some customer of mine talking X.25 to a telco to get their messages to
the phones anyway.
same for one of our banks not so
doesn't most of SMS (the crap on GSM's) also run on x.25?
i recall some customer of mine talking X.25 to a telco to get their
messages to the phones anyway.
same for one of our banks not so very long ago...
On Tue, 2 Nov 2010, Sven Olaf Kamphuis wrote:
Are there still any comme
also: yep.
commercial x.25 based packet radio networks, and the wired parts to keep
them together, are still around.
(the non-commercial ones also ofcourse ;)
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Add
le
concept of -files- and -zones- domain registrations should work
-instantly-! not after a "reload" of something that should not be used
anymore anyway).
with ipv6, it has =finally- become impossible to maintain that outdated
model! yay! good riddance :P
On Tue, 2 Nov 2010, David Freed
would be interested in anybody other
than IRC operators who feel they still require forward and reverse DNS
to match,
SMTP, email-2 (don't ask ;), and preferably (though not required) anything
that has to do with /bin/login on *nix systems (as it shows the reverse
dns host name in who and w and
I'm not sure there's consensus about whether forward and reverse ought
to match (how strong a "should" is that?).
that's pretty much of a "should" for IRC, and various anti-spam crap on
SMTP, furthermore, the entries should be (to a certain extend) unique
(hosted-by.provider.com resolving to ev
what's the problem anyway
with 32bit ASN's there should be enough AS namespace to give everyone that
wants to multihome their ipv6/ipv4 PI their own AS number...
should pretty much be the de-facto standard (unless ofcourse you want to
tie your customers to your internet-provider-activities by
We also have various customers that only obtain LIR registration services
and have no network links whatsoever with us (so just PI and/or AS
registration, no transit or whatever)
which -is- what a LIR does.. operating a network has nothing to do with
being a LIR per-se.
On Tue, 26 Oct 2010,
eh don't know about you americans but here in europe you just go to a LIR
and ask them to register an AS for you.
there are ofcourse maintenance fees nowadays.
On Tue, 26 Oct 2010, George Bonser wrote:
Shared hosting ISPs also do not make subdelegations and generally
don't
even uses the i
services on PI space (as you don't make sub delegations anyway)
On Tue, 26 Oct 2010, Sven Olaf Kamphuis wrote:
2. RIPE has always issued PI space to LIRs (ISPs are by
definition LIRs).
ISPs are not per-se LIRs.
LIRs register IP space on behalf of customers
customers that do
o be a LIR, and LIRs do not have to be an ISP.
(in fact, we are considering moving our LIR activities to a completely
seperate legal entity from our internet activities).
as a LIR is just a buro that issues IP space and does not nessesarily own
or operate a network.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf
On Tue, Oct 26, 2010 at 21:19, Sven Olaf Kamphuis wrote:
On Tue, 26 Oct 2010, Randy Carpenter wrote:
- Original Message -
On 10/26/2010 12:04 PM, Nick Hilliard wrote:
In practice, the RIRs are implementing sparse allocation which makes
it
possible to aggregate subsequent
ue ipv6 PI space.
so giving them their own space, is "problematic" to say the least.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE26
nt ddos attacks from even being possible
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE267268209
D-13359 Registration:HRA 4283
no, not the email address is the key, rather a unique string
issued by the receiver to each potentuial sender.
the email address does not stop spam originating from lets say, hacked
windows boxes.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co
When was email *ever* expected to be real-time? If you need real time, use IM (the clue
is in the "I"), or pick up the phone.
if you simply run the smtpd on port 25 of the little boxy thing with the
blinking lights and the big shiney apple on it on your
desk (which has for most applications
On Thu, 7 Oct 2010, Heath Jones wrote:
Well, anyway, here's three more hijacked blocks that they (AS6517)
are routing. This is in addition to the 75 such blocks I've already
reported. (I guess that makes 78 hijacked blocks for them, in total.)
Out of curiosity, are you also reporting these b
tractive as a means of communications (slow, unreliable and not
real-time, and still with spam coming in by the 1000s, which it is due to
"conventional" attempts to stop spam)
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
===
problem with these
however is that they're propriatory and vendor dependant).
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE267268209
D
Imap, pop2, pop3 and all that other crap could have been skipped.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE267268209
D-13359
ifferent locations" seems a bit.. pre-1993 to me.
plus, why only 2, why not... 20 or so, all in different parts of the world
and let bgp handle the rest.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Addr
btw, considering that you appearantly run a larger network than the 3
networks we own and operate, willing to sell? :P
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Ta
On Wed, 11 Aug 2010, Suresh Ramasubramanian wrote:
On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 4:59 PM, Sven Olaf Kamphuis wrote:
hmm funny, it had the piratebay on it, the 3rd most visted .org domain in
the world, as well as number 7 or so on the list of most visted websites in
the entire world, until a few
me :P
the MAFIAA surely did :P
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE267268209
D-13359 Registration:HR
.
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE267268209
D-13359 Registration:HRA 42834 B
BERLINP
order to get us to give out an address (the poor fuckers,
whatever happened to mtv-cribs ;)
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID:
L-NET
--
Greetings,
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG
=
Address: Koloniestrasse 34 VAT Tax ID: DE267268209
D-13359 Registration:HRA 42834 B
BERLIN
for contributions to
Pirate Party Netherlands.
More information can be found at:
http://staging.piratenpartij.nl/
Kind regards,
representing Pirate Party Netherlands
Rogier Huurman,
Secretary Pirate Party Netherlands
Sven Olaf Kamphuis,
Member Piratenpartei Deutschland
Member Piratenpartij
just to undermine the ITU's (only) point,
why don't we simply have IANA delegate lets say 25% of the available ipv6
space to AFRINIC and APNIC now, like, -now- already...
if they're so concerned about the "developing countries" surely, most of
them would be in those regions :P and that should
on this,
despite us isps being the owners of the internet and not the german
government ;).
therefore we are not even -allowed- to cooperate with trend micro *grin*
sometimes laws really come in handy you know ;)
--
Sven Olaf Kamphuis
CB3ROB Ltd. & Co. KG DataServices
Phone: +31/87-874747
>
> On 12/10/2009 7:29 AM, Sam Hayes Merritt, III wrote:
> > As previously noted in this thread, msulli...@sorbs did a fairly good
> > job of documenting this in an RFC draft. I'd say its still the primary
> > goto to point people at for how to do things the "right way".
> >
> > http://tools.ietf.o
tomatically generated
> reverse dns" (which in our case takes the form of
> a84-22-xx-xx.cb3rob.net. as it's RFC complient and we cannot be fucked to
> make up host names for each and every one of our many 10000 of ips in our
> many isp companies worldwide, and doesn't im
hristmastree of companies worldwide, etc would
be required as we dont plan to decide whats illegal and what not.
ofcourse all of this only applies to "real crime". not to whining dmca
idiots, whom are criminals themselves.
--
Sven Olaf Kamphuis
CB3ROB DataServices
Phone: +31/87-874
all, as
they so nicely point out themselves, no basic right to having your packets
relayed, so they'd better act friendly to isps, or paramount pictures may
well find their own networks inaccessible from most of the world rather
soon). at this moment, we can see such people as nothing else but a
ck up" the piratebay prefix for your eyeballs you can do
so by setting up peering with us at NL-IX (n...@cb3rob.net) or obtain it from
several of our
larger peers.
--
Sven Olaf Kamphuis
CB3ROB DataServices
Phone: +31/87-8747479
Skype: CB3ROB
MSN: s...@cb3rob.net
C.V.: http://www.linke
80 matches
Mail list logo