Re: Hey, SiteFinder is back, again...

From: Bill Stewart (no email)
Date: Mon Nov 05 2007 - 12:43:49 EST

  • Next message: Neil J. McRae: "RE: STM-1 Connection between Cisco LS1010 an Marconi ASX-200BX"

    When Verisign hijacked the wildcard DNS space for .com/.net, they
    encoded the Evil Bit in the response by putting Sitefinder's IP
    address as the IP address. In theory you could interpret that as
    damage and route around it, or at least build ACLs to block any
    traffic to that IP address except for TCP/80 and TCP/UDP/53. But if
    random ISPs are going to do that at random locations in their IP
    address space, and possibly serve their advertising from servers that
    also have useful information, it's really difficult to block.

    Does anybody know _which_ protocols Verizon's web-hijacker servers are
    supporting? Do they at least reject ports 443, 22, 23, etc.?

    In contrast, Microsoft's IE browser responds to DNS no-domain
    responses by pointing to a search engine, and I think the last time I
    used IE it let you pick your own search engine or turn it off if you
    didn't like MS's default. That's reasonable behaviour for an
    application, though it's a bit obsequious for my taste.


  • Next message: Neil J. McRae: "RE: STM-1 Connection between Cisco LS1010 an Marconi ASX-200BX"





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