Microsoft RickRolls Wi-Fi Network Leechers
An anonymous reader writes "Microsoft has revealed that it RickRolled users that were killing its TechEd conference Wi-Fi network last year by torrenting large files. Network administrators at the event quickly built a list of all of the top torrent trackers around and got the nod to add them all to the local DNS resolver and point them at a local Web server containing some Rick Roll scripts. According to the admin: 'It killed me that I didn't see anyone getting done by this first hand, but there were hundreds of impressions in the server logs containing the Rick Roll scripts so I did get a fair amount of satisfaction at least. It was the most evil of evil Rick Roll scripts too — worse than any that anyone has used to get me in the past.' Fun and games aside, it looks like the leechers will force quotas and traffic shaping for the first time in the event's history."
It's TechEd, not Hacking At Large (HAL2001). I recall somebody was taken aside for spoofing the mac address of an important server, the DNS server iirc.
It looks like the news link has been Slashdotted, Here's a mirror to the link
ic news story Microsoft
I solved this problem at the local library's public access wireless with a linux router and a token bucket filter with a big bucket. Each IP address gets a 10MByte bucket that fills up at 256kbits/second. The bucket is big enough that they'll never know they are limited for normal browsing, but a torrent sucks it try really fast and drops down to a slow enough speed that it's not really worthwhile. And even if they do stick with it at least they aren't burning through tens of gigabytes per day. It beats any other filter i've ever tried.
I still fondly remember the howls of dismay from the leechers when I turned it... they just couldn't understand why their downloads start at 20mbits/second but slow down to a crawl almost straight away :)
Rick Rolling is so last year....
gee ...
"Microsoft has revealed that it RickRolled users that were killing its TechEd conference WiFi network last year ....
Look on the bright side - at least you didn't make a total ass of yourself by saying:
What did you expect? This is Microsoft we're talking about here. They're always behind by a full year or five when it comes to internet memes.
Not very much...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/5130427/Pete-Waterman-I-was-exploited-by-Google.html
Get free bitcoins: http://freebitco.in
according to VH1's top 1 hit wonders witch had the now infamous song he still sings and is enjoying his new found fame and still makes new songs
The "Catch-22" is that you have to *gasp* assign your rights to someone in exchange for money?! What has this world come to?!
Let me be the first to tell you that copyright law actually had the artists' backs on this one. In order to allow artists to recover their early works that they may have assigned the rights to for far less than they're worth now (an economically suitable amount at the time given the risk to the buyer), copyright law allows the artists to cancel the assignment after some time. The right is inalienable.
It's a really long time, something like 40 years I think, but it's still something unique to what many people incorrectly think is a scam for artists.
No. As I understand it, those who are rickrolled basically get a customized DNS response that points all page requests to a local server with one web page and a blind redirect to that web page. That single web page has an embedded rickroll video.
Somewhat similar to how airports on a pay-for connection, or hotel connections work. Try to go to any website, and you get redirected to a login or purchase page.
Presumably any other connections not on port 80 (torrent, FTP, etc) are dropped.
So if you're surfing the web while torrenting, you'll get the rickroll video on the next page you load after you are detected, and you'll find that all of your torrents suddenly stop connecting.
"This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."