ah, bad news ~
too many Argus :)
2012/1/21 RijilV
> On 20 January 2012 07:53, Rich Kulawiec wrote:
> > On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 05:47:21PM +0800, Yang Xiang wrote:
> >> I build a system ?Argus? to real-timely alert prefix hijackings.
> >
> > A suggestion: pick a different name. There's already
2012/1/21 Suresh Ramasubramanian
> On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 10:45 PM, RijilV wrote:
> >> A suggestion: pick a different name. There's already a network tool
> >> named Argus (it's been around for years): http://www.qosient.com/argus/
> >>
> >> I suggest using the name of a different Wishbone Ash
On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 03:06:04PM -0500, Ricky Beam wrote:
> Upon receiving notice a file is infinging, they know that *file*
> is illegal, and must now remove all the links to it, not just the
> one that was reported.
But what -- *exactly* -- is an "illegal file"?
As Leo Bicknell astutely poi
Randy Carpenter writes:
> DHCP is certainly not stateless, which is why there is a concept of
> leases, which are stored in a file. You can't have 2 servers answering
> for the same subnet without some sort of coordination, or you would
> have a potential for duplicate addresses being assigned.
FYI,
Argus detected a hijacking just now.
It seems, I should send this email to South America NOG.
-- Forwarded message --
From: argus-alarm
Date: 2012/1/21
Subject: [Argus] 190.144.248.64/27 is 'hijacked' by anomalous origin
'AS27817'
To: argus
Prefix hijacking alarm:
Start
In article <20120121121149.ga14...@gsp.org>, Rich Kulawiec
writes
But what -- *exactly* -- is an "illegal file"?
Perhaps you mean "infringing"?
--
Roland Perry
On Sat, Jan 21, 2012 at 7:03 AM, Bjørn Mork wrote:
> Randy Carpenter writes:
>
> Duplicate assignments are not a problem as long as you ensure that the
> client is the same.
>
Duplicate assignments to different clients also won't be established if your
standby server has access to an identica
> > that was reported.
>
> But what -- *exactly* -- is an "illegal file"?
>
> As Leo Bicknell astutely pointed out in this thread:
>
> "Also, when using a hashed file store, it's possible that
> some uses are infringing and some are not."
The problem is going to be the thousands of
Several people have mentioned clustering software. Does any one have any
examples of such a thing that supports v4 and v6?
We have always used the built in failover in ISC dhcpd, and it works nicely. I
don't understand why they felt it would not be needed in v6.
-Randy
On Jan 21, 2012, at 12:3
On 01/21/12 12:38, George Bonser wrote:
that was reported.
But what -- *exactly* -- is an "illegal file"?
As Leo Bicknell astutely pointed out in this thread:
"Also, when using a hashed file store, it's possible that
some uses are infringing and some are not."
The problem is
> Not that I would not be a bit miffed if personal files disappeared, but
> that's one of the risks associated with using a cloud service for file
> storage. It could have been a fire, a virus erasing file, bankruptcy,
> malicious insider damage... Doesn't matter, you lost access to legit
> conte
On 01/21/2012 11:38 AM, George Bonser wrote:
Entire governments in the US are using "cloud storage" for their documentation these
days. It is my understanding (which is hearsay) that Google has an entire service aimed at small
governments (county and municipal mostly) in Google Docs for just t
>
> Sure, but balance that with podunk.usa's possibly incompetent IT staff?
> It costs a lot of money to run a state of the art shop, but only
> incrementally more as you add more and more instances of essentially
> identical shops. I guess I have more trust that Google is going to get
> the redun
On Jan 21, 2012, at 6:11 AM, Rich Kulawiec wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 20, 2012 at 03:06:04PM -0500, Ricky Beam wrote:
>> Upon receiving notice a file is infinging, they know that *file*
>> is illegal, and must now remove all the links to it, not just the
>> one that was reported.
>
> But what -- *ex
I have always had a certain fondness for paper.
Thanks,
Donald
=
Donald E. Eastlake 3rd +1-508-333-2270 (cell)
155 Beaver Street, Milford, MA 01757 USA
d3e...@gmail.com
On Sat, Jan 21, 2012 at 3:19 PM, George Bonser wrote:
>>
>> Sure, but balance that with podunk
On Sat, Jan 21, 2012 at 1:05 PM, Randy Carpenter wrote:
> Several people have mentioned clustering software. Does any one have any
> examples of such a thing that supports v4 and v6?
>
> Linux-HA, RSF-1, Oracle Solaris Cluster, Veritas cluster, are a few
examples of clustering software.
ocf_hear
On 1/21/12 11:38 , George Bonser wrote:
>> Not that I would not be a bit miffed if personal files disappeared,
>> but that's one of the risks associated with using a cloud service
>> for file storage. It could have been a fire, a virus erasing file,
>> bankruptcy, malicious insider damage... Does
On 01/21/2012 03:28 PM, Joel jaeggli wrote:
On 1/21/12 11:38 , George Bonser wrote:
Entire governments in the US are using "cloud storage" for their
documentation these days. It is my understanding (which is hearsay)
that Google has an entire service aimed at small governments (county
and munic
- Original Message -
> From: "Lyle Giese"
> Not that I would not be a bit miffed if personal files disappeared, but
> that's one of the risks associated with using a cloud service for file
> storage. It could have been a fire, a virus erasing file, bankruptcy,
> malicious insider damage..
- Original Message -
> From: "Donald Eastlake"
> I have always had a certain fondness for paper.
Well, I was wondering where the Whacky Weekend thread was this week.
"You can't grep dead trees."
Cheers,
-- jra
--
Jay R. Ashworth Baylink j...@bayl
- Original Message -
> From: "Joly MacFie"
> Technical nuances notwithsatnding, isn't the guts of the case that the
> megaupload team wilfully engaged in harbouring infringing files as
> evidenced by the email snooping, eg boasting to each other about
> having feature movies available pri
On 21/01/12 12:19 PM, George Bonser wrote:
Imagine a situation where several municipal governments in, say, Santa
Cruz County, California are using such services and there is a repeat
of the Loma Prieta quake. Their data survives in Santa Clara county,
their city offices survive but there is co
On Jan 21, 2012, at 8:00 PM, Jay Ashworth wrote:
> - Original Message -
>> From: "Lyle Giese"
>
>> Not that I would not be a bit miffed if personal files disappeared, but
>> that's one of the risks associated with using a cloud service for file
>> storage. It could have been a fire, a v
On 1/21/2012 12:19 PM, George Bonser wrote:
I agree, Mike. Problem is that the communications infrastructure that
enables these sorts of options is generally so reliable people don't
think about what will happen if something happens between them and
their data that takes out their access to tho
Well I have a question which is off the top of megaupload.com
But it's regarding governments around the world using cloud services.
Do we have others Canadians on this list who can confirm, what branches of
the Canada Government are actively using public cloud services like google
cloud services
On 01/21/2012 12:19 PM, George Bonser wrote:
Sure, but balance that with podunk.usa's possibly incompetent IT staff?
It costs a lot of money to run a state of the art shop, but only
incrementally more as you add more and more instances of essentially
identical shops. I guess I have more trust tha
> This is what disaster simulations are for, to suss out these problems
> before a disaster and put in systems to avoid the mess.
>
> In the real world, while a city might keep the digital documents "in
> the cloud" they would also (always) have paper copies, because in a big
> emergency their com
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