5% of the Net is Unreachable
dasheiff writes "A BBC
Story says
US researchers reveal that up to 5% of the internet is completely unreachable. However the most interesting part is that they reported that many of the lost net sites flare into life briefly when being used to send spam or to launch attacks on other parts of the net."
Couldn't this be part of the IP-blocks that just appear and disappear mostly for sending spam?
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AlmostFreeLinux.com
I've run into sites which are up or down and often they're in a small shop and they actually power down their server (or it happens with a power/service outage) Lots of broken links on images. It would be interesting to see a statistic on how many pages which are technically non-functional still exist, i.e. with parts unable to display due to broken links, from sites gone away or pages moved but links not updated (which even M$N does from time to time)
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
either that, or contact the ISPs that control the various routers en route to the SPAM servers, and have them block certain IPs Packets from being forwarded.
After they switched our cable modem over to AT&T's new network from Excite, I noticed that even though they were dynamically assigning the router 5 different DNS servers on widely disparate networks, I still couldn't resolve regular sites like slashdot or CNN. Just errored out.
Did Excite do some sort of large scale public service that I'm unaware of? Were they providing really top of the line DNS service and I was just too dumb to realize it?
Doesn't this sound like a country song... "Didn't know what good DNS I had, until it was gone..."
Maybe it's time I press this old windows box into service as a public DNS server. I mean, small contributions make the world go around, right? I bet I could get redhat running in an hour or less...
This just proves, an idle mind is the devil's workshop...
Who did what now?
I noticed this last night, too, so I did some whois-es, and went to the website of their registrar, and it appears that their registration has lapsed or something. (Nasty Christmas surprise.)
I resisted the temptation to re-register the domain for them for $6.75 per annum, as it would probably cause too much trouble, and I have no idea what their DNS servers are, etc.
I think the evolution of IPv6 will take place in new networks, for example 3G mobile nets. Over time this new networks will take over the old ones, and one by one IPv6 nets will become obselete and switched off. I'll agree that a large number of networks will convert from v4 to v6, for example academic networks, but most will just fade into the past. Perhaps one day the v4 internet will become a cult network once again ruled by the hackers that invented it.
You say "spammers hide"? They don't. I am puzzled how to fight a dedicated spam-ISP like this one who offers "safe haven" for all bulk-mail senders that were kicked out from other ISPs. Can I make THEIR portion of internet unreachable?
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Next time you spout off, maybe you might think about actually researching the subject first. This whole story is based on a paper that was presented at the October NANOG conference.
You do a disservice to the memory of Abha Ahuja with your uninformed yelping. This had nothing to do with a cheap gimmick to get publicity.
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Bill Gates Is My Evil Twin.