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GoDaddy Goes Down, Anonymous Claims Responsibility

An anonymous reader writes "A member of the Anonymous hacktivist group appears to have taken down GoDaddy with a massive Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS). The widespread issue seems to be affecting countless websites and services around the world, although not for everyone. Godaddy.com is down, but so are some of the site's DNS servers, which means GoDaddy hosted e-mail accounts are down as well, and lots more. It's currently unclear if the servers are being unresponsive or if they are completely offline. Either way, the result is that if your DNS is hosted on GoDaddy, your site may also look as if it is down, because it cannot resolve."

483 comments

  1. This is big by Terry+Pearson · · Score: 5, Funny

    I was just noticing the large number of sites that are down. I hope it gets resolved soon!

    1. Re:This is big by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I hope they lose a lot of business from it. GoDaddy is an aweful company.

    2. Re:This is big by Riddler+Sensei · · Score: 4, Funny

      I hope it gets resolved soon!

      *bah dum tish*?

    3. Re:This is big by houstonbofh · · Score: 5, Funny

      There has also been a huge reduction is spam and crap e-mail on technical mailing lists. So I am kinda mixed on how soon I want them to fix it.

    4. Re:This is big by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm awe-filled by how sleezy they are.

    5. Re:This is big by Hentes · · Score: 2

      There's not much hope, as now Slashdot have also joined the attack.

    6. Re:This is big by noh8rz10 · · Score: 1

      godaddy.com works for me. probably just a bunch of script kiddies.

    7. Re:This is big by cod3r_ · · Score: 0, Interesting

      they may be aweful, but the hosted email has been damn decent for the 4+ years I've been with them. I've always sort of snickered at the shit anonymous did, but now their vendetta against a big company fucks us little guys too.

    8. Re:This is big by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      I was wondering what the "+5 funny" mod was about...

    9. Re:This is big by alexandreracine · · Score: 1

      Karl Otter and Vallace Berry must be working very hard now!

      --
      No sig for now.
    10. Re:This is big by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you sleep with a whore, you can not complain if you get syphilis.

    11. Re:This is big by CptNerd · · Score: 1

      Except it's your crowd that's giving *everyone* HIV, no matter how you try to justify it.

      --
      By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
    12. Re:This is big by theArtificial · · Score: 2, Insightful

      they may be aweful, but the hosted email has been damn decent for the 4+ years I've been with them. I've always sort of snickered at the shit anonymous did, but now their vendetta against a big company fucks us little guys too.

      Please don't misconstrue this as support for Anonymous' actions. You seem to forget that SOPA would fuck the little guys, too. Perhaps you've forgotten who supported that legislation, and why Wikipedia and many others (including myself, a customer for over 10 years) have left GoDaddy.

      --
      Man blir trött av att gå och göra ingenting.
    13. Re:This is big by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      What if I use a latex condom?

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    14. Re:This is big by NSN+A392-99-964-5927 · · Score: 2

      What if I use a latex condom?

      Use a C4 condom instead insert detonator and you will get the bang of your life.

      --
      All cows eat grass!
    15. Re:This is big by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about small businesses that are counting on GoDaddy for services? Do they deserve to lose business?
      Such an unbelievably selfish attitude, punish everyone because I disagree with someone else.
      How is that even marked "Insightful" it should be marked "Petty and Selfish".
      It's sure easy to judge other people when it's not your family affected but at least pretend to care about others.

    16. Re:This is big by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      One time I actually had this bizarre dream about "luck-o'-the-Irish" brand Irish condoms whose "selling feature" was that some of them would explode when used, but you have to "expect" that it won't happen to you because "by some bizarre logic", you "got lucky".

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    17. Re:This is big by ryanov · · Score: 1

      I left too, and therefore was unaffected.

    18. Re:This is big by ryanov · · Score: 1

      I'm on the board of a "small business." We left, and were therefore unaffected.

    19. Re:This is big by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whether or not Godaddy went down due to attacks or incompetance, they are still evil pricks. When youdo business with them, don't act shocked that you got hurt.

      It is like when businesses complain that they just lost a lot of money because they chose to do business with Microsoft or Oracle.

      Don't do business with evil fucks and the odds of you getting hurt go down substantially.

    20. Re:This is big by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Do they deserve to lose business?"

      Yes

      If they are unethical, or just oblivious enough to do business with GoDaddy they deserve everything that happens.

      Would you say that a roofer working on a house of a known mobster didn't deserve to die when the house got hit?

      Don't do business with evil fucks.

  2. You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Now you jerk faces are affecting actual Interstate commerce on a massive scale. My own website is down. If you didn't get the attention of the FBI before, you have it now.

    1. Re:You think this is a Game? by i286NiNJA · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hate to blame the victim but why on earth are you using godaddy who supports anyone having the ability to take your website down?

    2. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What information are you basing this one? GoDaddy itself does not appear down. This appears to be a DNS exploit. That would put .... oh I don't know... every single host on earth at risk.

    3. Re:You think this is a Game? by Aqualung812 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      His point is that GoDaddy supported SOPA, which allowed companies to shut down websites on a whim.

      If you continued to support GoDaddy after learning about this, then it is assumed you're fine with people's websites being shutdown for no good reason.

      Therefore, why are you upset now?

      You're the roofer on the Death Star. You knew the risks.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    4. Re:You think this is a Game? by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You could host your own dns, like a big boy.

      This is what happens when you push everything out into the cloud. Somedays it rains and there ain't shit you can do about it.

    5. Re:You think this is a Game? by i286NiNJA · · Score: 2

      You misunderstand. Godaddy supported SOPA. Essentially they support anyone claiming to be a content owner taking your site down for infringement while the claim is investigated. Why not go with a better cheaper provider anyhow?

    6. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      That might have mattered back when SOPA was still a thing people cared about. That was months ago. Your blame the victim mentality is appalling and ignorant.

    7. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 0, Troll

      They supported legislation which was purported to be good for business. In the end once they knew the details of the bill, they pulled their support.

    8. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for choosing GoDaddy!

    9. Re:You think this is a Game? by h4rr4r · · Score: 3, Funny

      Citation needed

      Perhaps a link to a document on their web site :)

    10. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are right, I could. I don't sit on mutiple ISPs in a SAS70 rated datacenter with diverse physical location redundancy and power backup. So I let them do it. It would be trivial for me to move my DNS records. That totally misses the point. The hacking is causing loss of productivity. I know this is funny to you but for the people affected it is a giant waste of time and nothing will be accomplished by it.

    11. Re:You think this is a Game? by Rix · · Score: 0

      Your tears are delicious.

    12. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 0

      Well guess what Anonymous, it a few short hours Godaddy already fixed the problem you made. GoDaddy is back up for me. Looks like you lose.

    13. Re:You think this is a Game? by achbed · · Score: 5, Interesting

      On top of that, you didn't read the TOS from GoDaddy. That allows *them* to turn your site off on a whim without prior notice. This might just be the hackers turning on the built-in kill switch for every GoDaddy site simultaneously.

    14. Re:You think this is a Game? by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

      You don't, but if you did your DNS would still work.

      I think it is bad that this happened, but this is what you get whenever you put your eggs in one basket.

      It is not funny to me, other than finding out what companies my company does business with that we clearly should not be since they let godaddy host their DNS.

    15. Re:You think this is a Game? by sohmc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I highly doubt that they didn't know the details of the bill. The bill was available via Thomas and it's broad strokes were known for quite some time.

      GoDaddy wanted to placate the MPAA/RIAA/etc because it was a business decision. Once they realized that they had a massive exodus of customers, they made the business decision to reverse their stance.

      Their decision had little to do with knowing the bill. Their decision was made because it was the fiscally responsible thing to do. They probably didn't predict that the fallout would be as drastic as it was.

      --
      We don't live in Shouldland.
    16. Re:You think this is a Game? by i286NiNJA · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So since people stopped caring about SOPA it's not a big deal now? It's getting pushed through piecemeal. I'm gonna laugh when your precious website can't be reliably hosted anywhere in the USA.

      Lesson is: Don't do important business with losers.

    17. Re:You think this is a Game? by Aqualung812 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So, you thought giving your domain name to a bunch of clowns that support laws that they don't understand was a good plan?

      Doesn't seem to be working out good.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    18. Re:You think this is a Game? by Sulphur · · Score: 1

      What information are you basing this one? GoDaddy itself does not appear down. This appears to be a DNS exploit. That would put .... oh I don't know... every single host on earth at risk.

      The Web is falling, the Web is falling, and I have a piece of it right here.

    19. Re:You think this is a Game? by Cinder6 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well, it explains why my podcast app didn't update my favorite podcast--just ran a whois to confirm that they're hosted on GoDaddy.

      What's obnoxious about something like this is that the attack isn't likely to get the attention of the general public. Most people will see their favorite site is down, say "Aw, shucks," and check again later. The news likely won't even mention this, what with election season going on and giving them better yellow journalism fodder. The people who will know the reason why some of their favorite sites are down are like those here on Slashdot: The same people that already dislike GoDaddy.

      I'm not saying that protest is a bad thing--far from it. But ineffective protest is. All this attack accomplishes is to hurt the little guy--the people who use GoDaddy.

      But maybe I'm wrong. Maybe GoDaddy's customers will all jump ship because of this. I doubt it, though.

      --
      If you can't convince them, convict them.
    20. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 5, Informative

      Considering their website stayed up during the whole attack, your joke fails. http://support.godaddy.com/godaddy/statement-about-sopa/

    21. Re:You think this is a Game? by thisisfutile · · Score: 0

      We have a dozen emails going to 6 different domains still stuck in our Exchange queue so I don't believe it's fixed yet. Although, I did see one domain empty out a little while ago and someone has since sent another email to them and that second one is now stuck.

    22. Re:You think this is a Game? by i_ate_god · · Score: 0

      Hammers are used to bash peoples heads in, but I still buy them.

      --
      I'm god, but it's a bit of a drag really...
    23. Re:You think this is a Game? by MachDelta · · Score: 5, Funny

      You're the roofer on the Death Star.

      B-but... it's a sphere? How? Where... does the roof? I... i'm so confused.... Shouldn't he also be the, uh, waller... and flooring guy...? My childhood... crumbling... Nnooooooooooooo!

      Oh well, at least I still have Clerks...

    24. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Either way you're still vulnerable to a DDoS attack.

      True, but I'd rather have my own server rather than be collateral DDoS damage. It's the same reason I didn't rent a room in Saddam Hussein's palace; sometimes distance from a high profile target makes you safer.

    25. Re:You think this is a Game? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      But no one could get to it, so it does not matter. The link would still be non-functional which is all that matters for my joke.

    26. Re:You think this is a Game? by houstonbofh · · Score: 1

      You know that you can have DNS in two totally different places, right? Even three of four!

    27. Re:You think this is a Game? by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      :)
      Thanks, I actually LOL'd at your comment.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    28. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Woosh!
      Do you have a PR release that I can see from GoDaddy as well?

    29. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 0

      That's a lot of conjecture you are using there. Be careful, you might end up arguing that black is white and be stampeded at the next Zebra Crossing.

    30. Re:You think this is a Game? by cjjjer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And how in your brain is Anonymous forcefully taking down websites based on their ideals any different than the Gov. using SOPA to take down websites?

      Pot meet kettle, Hey! We're both black who-da-thunk!

    31. Re:You think this is a Game? by Capt.DrumkenBum · · Score: 1

      Hammers are used to bash peoples heads in, so I still buy them.
      I prefer my version.

      --
      If I were God, wouldn't I protect my churches from acts of me?
    32. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bob9113 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Their decision was made because it was the short-run profiteering thing to do.

      There, fixed that for ya. The fiscally responsible thing to do is to ensure the long-run fitness of the United States and global economy.

      The MPAA and RIAA are pushing for increasing the strength of their regulatory monopolies to channel a larger share of GDP into their products, which shifts us further out on the cultural supply curve. That increases units produced and per-unit price, which has the effect of increasing cultural production while reducing the per-unit cost efficiency. That would be a good thing if we were suffering from a shortage of cultural production and the economy was running strong. Since we are on the opposite side of both those balances at the moment, however, supporting that agenda to curry their favor is short-run profiteering -- not fiscal responsibility.

    33. Re:You think this is a Game? by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      So they take you rinky dink website down by taking down the websites of all of their customers? Talk about cutting off your nose to spite your face.

    34. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't I have to update my records for each server independently then each time I made a change?

    35. Re:You think this is a Game? by InvisiBill · · Score: 5, Interesting

      His point is that GoDaddy supported SOPA, which allowed companies to shut down websites on a whim.

      If you continued to support GoDaddy after learning about this, then it is assumed you're fine with people's websites being shutdown for no good reason.

      Therefore, why are you upset now?

      You're the roofer on the Death Star. You knew the risks.

      Actually, his point is probably that GoDaddy's policies, regardless of SOPA/PIPA support, allow them to shut down websites on a whim. They've repeatedly demonstrated this by completely shutting down entire accounts when served a DMCA complaint for one site. http://yro.slashdot.org/story/12/05/25/1744246/photographer-threatened-with-legal-action-after-asserting-his-copyright is one example. (Part of the reason she went crazy was that all of her sites, including one regarding special needs children, were suspended after GoDaddy received the DMCA complaint over one photo on one specific site.)

      GoDaddy has made it clear that it takes very little to convince them to suspend a customer's entire account. If you choose to use GoDaddy's services, that's a risk you're taking.

    36. Re:You think this is a Game? by X0563511 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That might have mattered back when SOPA was still a thing people cared about.

      This right there is why this stuff is so insidious. We have to be vigilant.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    37. Re:You think this is a Game? by i286NiNJA · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I was giving good business advice actually, most of the time when I lose money it's because I wasn't selective who I trusted. So it's my fault for losing money because I trusted a moron with business.

      Also good job with the rape out of the blue.. why don't you throw in some nazis and compare me to bush while you're at it. You're like the idiot who shops at wal-mart... except with best buy prices and customer service.

    38. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      U mad bro?

    39. Re:You think this is a Game? by X0563511 · · Score: 1

      Nope. I can't reach their nameservers - it's not that they are pretending the sites within don't exist. They are not listening at all.

      --
      For large sets, this will be our guide even unto death, for the LORD will work for each type of data it is applied to...
    40. Re:You think this is a Game? by clarkkent09 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A lot of companies (and unions) supported SOPA: http://www.scribd.com/doc/76259944/SOPA-Supporters

      Therefore, why are you upset now?

      Do you use a MasterCard or VISA? Do you watch ABC, follow pro football or basketball, buy books published by Random House, HarperCollins or McGraw-Hill, are a paying member of any of a dozen unions, buy any products made by Revlon, Pfizer, LOreal, Sony and a hundred other companies?

      According to your logic, if any of the above is true, you should not be upset if a group of random hackers shuts down your website and causes you financial harm.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    41. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Typically you'd have one single master name server (usually hidden) that you edit, which pushes updates to any number of slave servers that it can transfer the zone to. The slaves are what you publicize as the authoritative servers for your domain.

      Setting up multiple slaves with multiple providers isn't entirely trivial and more expensive than just paying one provider to be authoritative for you but is certainly possible.

    42. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A roofer listens to his heart, not his wallet.

    43. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, I was hoping for something a little better than that from you, sir. A man of your education

    44. Re:You think this is a Game? by xaxa · · Score: 1

      You could host secondary DNS yourself.

      Can anyone tell me: if this is done, what happens when either DNS server is down, from the point of view of the user?

    45. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      No, the link WAS functional. Everybody agreed that godaddy.com stayed up. It was the websites they hosted which went down.

    46. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yeah yeah. And don't wear that dress or you will be asking to get raped. Fuck off and die you miserable scum.

      If you picked GoDaddy to host your DNS and/or website, it's more like "Yeah yeah. And don't lie spread-eagled in a dark alley with a sign that says 'please fuck me', or you might get what you are asking for..."

    47. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, No, No, yes :(, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, ......(maybe 75 additional "no"s)

    48. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the alternative is being attacked by a clown who does not understand how Domain registration and how DNS works? I guess it is time to move all 1500 of our domains over to another vendor? Get real...

    49. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You would, but how often do you change your DNS records? Mine are pretty static.

    50. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not unless you're hosting with lame companies who don't grok how record propagation works.

      Caveat: The majority of DNS hosting companies are terrible at hosting DNS.

    51. Re:You think this is a Game? by formfeed · · Score: 2

      affecting actual Interstate commerce

      I thought only websites hosted by go-daddy were affected.

    52. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't quite get the childish squabbling, but that link is down. You cannot access it.

    53. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't I have to update my records for each server independently then each time I made a change?

      Depends on how you're doing it. Ideally, yes, rather than having some thinking they're secondary to primaries that might end up dead. But, really, how hard is it to edit some A records on a few different platforms once in a while? Or, are you making tons of DNS changes every week? It's not that hard, truly.

    54. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should have moved when whole SOPA/PIPA shit started to brew, did you really think nothing will happen out of this? Again, i am glad it happened to them, not very happy it happened to you personally.

    55. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't recommend GoDaddy hosted email to anybody. Not that they implement their solution in a bad way but because its a bad solution. I always use one of two solutions based on ability to pay:

      1) Google Apps (Free or $50 per year)
      2) Hosted Exchange (between $5-20 a month)

    56. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called work.

    57. Re:You think this is a Game? by ildon · · Score: 2

      Who is "everybody?" Godaddy.com hasn't been resolving for me since at least 1:30 PM EDT. It continues to not resolve for me now (5 PM EDT).

    58. Re:You think this is a Game? by leonardluen · · Score: 5, Informative

      If i recall GoDaddy had a hand in writing the bill as well. they finally changed their stance after there was an exodus from their service over SOPA. and even then it seemed they only changed their stance because of their bottom dollar, and ultimately they still believed in it.

      I pulled all my domains from GoDaddy a long time ago because of their SOPA support.

      It seems anonymous is rather late to the party for this. all the SOPA stuff was many months ago.

    59. Re:You think this is a Game? by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What's obnoxious about something like this is that the attack isn't likely to get the attention of the general public. Most people will see their favorite site is down, say "Aw, shucks," and check again later.

      "Most people" aren't the target audience here. The target audience is IT administrators who are given the task of choosing a domain hosting solution.

      Domain hosting choice involves a lot of factors such as cost, customer satisfaction, down-time, and so on. If Anonymous can insert a new factor "being down due to backlash from unethical behaviour", they will have accomplished their goal.

      Numerous studies show that tiny influences can have a noticeable effect on large populations. We see this all the time where human decision-making is involved - tiny influences will not sway any individual decision, but those same tiny effects have enough of an effect to be measurable in the population at large.

      That's what Anonymous (or rather, the hacker with "Anonymous" in his name) is doing here - generating a new, tiny influence which might have an effect on the overall population.

      They are bringing "company reputation" back into the purchase decision process.

    60. Re:You think this is a Game? by LodCrappo · · Score: 1

      If your business is so completely unimportant to you that you would trust something as critical as dns to a company like GoDaddy, I doubt the FBI is going to be very concerned with your loss.

      --
      -Lod
    61. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Crap, what a catastrophe, I wonder how I'll manage to live without your website.

      I think I'm going to need emergency care for the abstinence symptoms.

    62. Re:You think this is a Game? by TCM · · Score: 2

      I love those naive random thoughts. As if noone ever had more than one DNS server.

      Google "DNS master slave setup". "Hidden primary" is another key phrase. DNS runs the Internet. It's not some toy that can't handle every imaginable setup.

      --
      Of course it runs NetBSD. BTC: 1NT7QvbetmANwaMzhpVL6
    63. Re:You think this is a Game? by richlv · · Score: 1
      --
      Rich
    64. Re:You think this is a Game? by blind+biker · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry you're having difficulties because of this hack. It's so sad that GoDaddy customersare in the shit like you are now.

      Aw, whatever will we do to help? Sigh, sob.... maybe shoulda jumped ship when GoDaddy made it public they support SOPA?

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    65. Re:You think this is a Game? by blind+biker · · Score: 4, Informative

      Once they realized that they had a massive exodus of customers, they made the business decision to reverse their stance.

      GoDaddy never reversed their stance on SOPA! They basically said that they will not be so upfront with their support of the bill.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    66. Re:You think this is a Game? by macklin01 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's affecting a lot more than commerce.

      My cancer research website is down, too. (Only works on computers that had cached the DNS entries.) So much for inviting seminar speakers today.

      I'm an academic. I set my site up years ago (before all the SOPA business) and don't have time to muck with moving my site around, hosting DNS here and content there, and the like. I barely have time to maintain content in the middle of a busy research career. I suppose I'm now supposed to be an expert on mathematical modeling + cancer + hosting my own DNS?

      It's always worth keeping in mind that these things affect far more than business sites.

      --
      OpenSource.MathCancer.org: open source comp bio
    67. Re:You think this is a Game? by BronsCon · · Score: 2

      More accurately, it's: Don't be surprised if the armed thug you're doing business with holds you at gunpoint and robs you, or gets raided by the feds while you're there (getting you arrested at the same time).

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    68. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If done the way DNS is designed to work, you update the primary (master) and it propagates to the secondaries (slaves). Change record, bump serial #, reload zone and watch it propagate.

    69. Re:You think this is a Game? by izomiac · · Score: 1

      This is a crime and it's unfortunate for GoDaddy's customers. That said, I see two errors in your judgement that made this possible:

      First, you chose to associate with GoDaddy, which is a calculated risk at best given how they earned the internet's ire with their SOPA position, and they weren't terribly reputable to being with.

      Second, your primary and secondary DNS servers have a common point of failure. That's rather common, heck I do it for my own websites, but I'm not dependent upon them for anything critically important, thus I can afford to be lazy.

    70. Re:You think this is a Game? by Lost+Race · · Score: 2

      Resolvers generally query multiple (or all) name servers for the domain simultaneously, and take whichever response comes back first. As long as one server is responding reliably, everything will work transparently for clients, though perhaps a bit slower. If that one server ever drops a packet then clients could see a long delay or outright lookup failure.

    71. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If this is causing you a loss of productivity, that is more than you budgeted for, for such a failure (and failures will ALWAYS occur), then you mismanaged or misunderstood your Risk; either way, it's your fault as either you're complaining for nothing or you should have spent the extra money to protect your business.

      This may sound harsh, but I deal daily with this situation and it really gets you down... funny how it's my fault something crashes but not their fault a few thousand dollars worth of equipment (requested in writing with an explanation of why it was needed) would have prevented it but they turned it down to get the meeting room redesigned :(

    72. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you serious or not? There are slave DNS servers and zone transfers for that exact purpose.

    73. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Figure it out. You're on Slashdot for gods sake not webhosting 101.

    74. Re:You think this is a Game? by SammyIAm · · Score: 1

      "Nothing will be accomplished by it" only if when it's all over no one takes any action. You seem pretty upset about it, but are you planning on doing anything about the alleged motivation for the attack (i.e SOPA and the like)? Or when GoDaddy gets their servers back up and releases a "comforting" statement to their remaining customers, are you going to go back to ignoring everything but your own website?

    75. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't sit on mutiple ISPs in a SAS70 rated datacenter with diverse physical location redundancy and power backup.

      Or you could just have a slave nameserver with another hosting firm. I'm sure that some companies are willing to do that for you for a price in the two figure range. You get the advantage of not waking up in the middle of the night hoping that Anonymous or some guy with a botnet takes down your nameservers. Hell, you could even setup your own nameserver if you feel up to it. It's not like people haven't written howtos on this very subject.

      In fact, I would go as far as saying that not setting up a slave DNS server somewhere else is probably just asking for it. But hey, you throw money at that buzzword datacenter of yours. Dumbass.

      So I let them do it.

      You were just irresponsible with your setup, and you pay the price for your stupidity with downtime. That's all.

      The hacking is causing loss of productivity.

      Yeah, and burglaries cause loss of ownership. Welcome to the world where it's not all rainbows and kittens. I hope you didn't promise your customers rainbows and kittens all the time. Perhaps with a bit of luck you can still make 99.99% kittens and rainbow uptime. Whoops, clock is ticking... Better make that 99.9% kittens and rainbows.

      I know this is funny to you but for the people affected it is a giant waste of time and nothing will be accomplished by it.

      Funny? Hardly. Your rant is what is funny. You sit here ranting about loss of productivity and what not, but in reality you could've saved yourself the trouble by spending just a tiny amount of money. You clearly are incapable of running the most basic of fundamental network services that the average person on this website can, and you've just learned the most valuable lesson in your entire career: don't put all your eggs in one basket.

      It's not funny, because assclowns like you with a basic lack of understanding of how stuff works, and apparently a lack of insight into the world at large whine when you shoot yourself in the foot. Even less funny is that once realizing how badly you fucked up, you then shift the blame for your lack of insight into these matters solely onto others. And finally the least funny part of all is that you'll probably walk away from this incident none the wiser.

      So you'll have to excuse while I sheepishly grin in your general direction as I write the words "Deal with it". Clearly you could have prevented this whole thing by spending 20 bucks and having a basic understanding of how DNS works. Clearly you could've figured out by yourself before this happens that bad and stupid people can do bad things. And clearly if you had a shred of competence replacing the negligence currently lodged firmly in your rear-end you could've come to the conclusion that things like this can and eventually will happen.

      Have a nice day.

    76. Re:You think this is a Game? by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Didn't Obama JUST sign an executive order that was basically CISPA? Is that maybe the reason for the timing?

    77. Re:You think this is a Game? by Medievalist · · Score: 2

      Wait, you put 1500 domains on GoDady?

      And you've never bothered to develop an exit strategy?

      I have no idea how to respond to that.

    78. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Anonymous can insert a new factor "being down due to backlash from unethical behaviour", they will have accomplished their goal.

      Oh, great idea. Let me just set up my new website using the company that Anonymous pinkie-swears they will never attack because of its flawless ethical practices. Which company is that again?

    79. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't sit on mutiple ISPs in a SAS70 rated datacenter with diverse physical location redundancy and power backup.

      So if your servers go down what difference does it make if your DNS is up?
      or: "They may not be able to get to my website, but at least they know where it is!"

    80. Re:You think this is a Game? by skelly33 · · Score: 2

      It affects sites whose *DNS* is hosted by GoDaddy. That would make any site hosted by GoDaddy fair game... as well as any site that uses their DNS Manager, but hosts off-site.

    81. Re:You think this is a Game? by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      Not so fast, there.

      Could not locate remote server

      Check that the address is spelled correctly, or try searching for the site.

      Internetsupervision.com reports that support.godaddy.com fails a DNS lookup for 5 of its 8 test servers.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    82. Re:You think this is a Game? by LodCrappo · · Score: 2

      no, that link WAS NOT functional for a great number of folks, as was the main godaddy.com site, for several hours. It may have worked for you, but no one agrees that godaddy.com stayed up, because it did not.

      --
      -Lod
    83. Re:You think this is a Game? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Uhhh...you use GoDaddy, whose CEO brags about security being for cadavers, is practically legendary as a sleazy company,as others noted spews spam, and you want us to feel bad for you?

      This is like bitching the those damned treehuggers at Greenpeace are keeping you from dumping your toxic waste in the ocean, wow how dare they! Word of advice, maybe you should choose a company a little less sleazeball huh?

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    84. Re:You think this is a Game? by LodCrappo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you take your project seriously and believe your website is an important part of it, you simply must acquire the skill to make good decisions regarding it's implementation or hire an expert who can do this for you. You cannot stick your head in the sand and cry "I'm too busy, too important!" and expect any sympathy from me. Do you use that approach as an excuse for every area in which you fail to bring in proper expertise?

      GoDaddy has a long track record of poor service and questionable practices the predates any SOPA business by many years. They offer nothing unique and have dozens of more reputable competitors. There is only one reason anyone uses GoDaddy: low cost.

      This is your responsibility. Certainly you didn't end up using GoDaddy's services purely by random chance. A decision was made by someone, and it was made poorly. Probably someone trying to save a few bucks. It's highly unlikely that this will be the only ramification of that bad decision. It's also somewhat likely that other, similarly poor choices have been made in how your technical infrastructure is designed.

      --
      -Lod
    85. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not if you configure it correctly.

    86. Re:You think this is a Game? by babywhiz · · Score: 1

      Considering GoDaddy didn't give a rats ass when they kept our website down for 2 weeks because they couldn't figure out how to manage ColdFusion (this happened right before they announced giving it up)....during this process in which they convinced us to PAY FOR 2 more years of ColdFusion hosting...in which 4 months into it they announced they were discontinuing ColdFusion.

      It doesn't matter if you like or hate ColdFusion, the point was they offered it, we paid for it, and they spent 2 weeks dinking around getting it back up running after they moved the site around to non-ColdFusion servers (without our request or approval.). I didn't choose GoDaddy to begin with, I was just stuck having to support it until those decision makers were kicked to the door. Good thing the website isn't that important, in our business. (We host our own email.)

      I personally grinned. Nothing annoys the shit out of me more than IT people that treat other IT people like crap and feed us full of crap (and we know it the minute they say it) and get paid so much to do it when you know damn well they don't do their job worth a crap.

      Sorry. Off tangent. Maybe I am still a little bitter from the whole experience with them.

    87. Re:You think this is a Game? by Twinbee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This point has been brought up before. 'Godaddy' should have known better since they're in the technology business sector. Their whole business revolves around the lifeblood of the internet. I think practically every other registrar wasn't involved with SOPA one bit.

      More to the point though, Goddaddy is simply a less efficient company compared to many, and the world would be better off without them (no offense intended, since it'd be great to free up their time for more productive tasks, or simply free time for its own sake).

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    88. Re:You think this is a Game? by SgtAaron · · Score: 1

      You could host secondary DNS yourself.

      Can anyone tell me: if this is done, what happens when either DNS server is down, from the point of view of the user?

      End-users should not notice a thing. The caching resolver they use at their ISP will try one of the listed
      nameservers for a domain first (typically at random) if that address is not already in its cache, and if
      the connection fails will automagically try the next in its list, if that fails the next, and so on. A delay of
      some milliseconds in name resolution will be the only result, and probably not even noticed. If both
      (or all if more than one) of the listed nameservers are offline and their is no cache entry for the looked up
      name, the resolver will return an error to the client. Then they get a network connection error or whatever
      their particular web browser decides to call the problem.

    89. Re:You think this is a Game? by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      I've found Namecheap to be very good (I'm not the only one, that seems to the overall consensus on the web, on here, and on Reddit too). I don't know an amazing amount, but found it VERY easy to transfer from my previous registrar, and they'll probably help you anyway. Heck even I might help if you like.

      Sorry to hear about the seminar - maybe an offline copy of your website would have been doable...

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    90. Re:You think this is a Game? by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      Can I have 7 of 9?

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    91. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got what you deserve.

      Stop dealing with evil companies.

    92. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or perhaps GoDaddy just shot themselves in the proverbial foot and are now planting "claims" by anonymous to missdirect from the fact that they're utterly incompetent.

    93. Re:You think this is a Game? by spirit_fingers · · Score: 1

      GoDaddy supported SOPA initially, but rescinded their support last December.

      http://www.godaddy.com/newscenter/release-view.aspx?news_item_id=378&isc=smtwsup

    94. Re:You think this is a Game? by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Wally-World has Customer Service? That's a different orientation for a human predation.

    95. Re:You think this is a Game? by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      That's about as useful an answer to a small, possibly non-technical business that pays someone to host a website as if I were to tell you to stop complaining about your bandwidth and create your own fiber backbone. Despite this GoDaddy meltdown, having every podunk website host its own DNS would be a complete disaster.

    96. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you're the idiot who says that the idiot who was shopping at Walmart deserved to be stabbed to death in the Walmart car park, because it's his own fault for shopping at a store that you personally disagree with.

    97. Re:You think this is a Game? by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 2

      Everybody agreed that godaddy.com stayed up. It was the websites they hosted which went down.

      Who is this "everybody" you're referring to? GoDaddy.com itself was unresponsive when I checked it after reading this story roughly 4 hours ago.

      --
      People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
    98. Re:You think this is a Game? by horza · · Score: 1

      Productivity for who? No professional would use GoDaddy and so they are unaffected. The poor amateur chumps that do use such insalubrious providers will be inconvenienced... but will they somehow read why? If not then you are right. If the message gets through about their business practices then those temporarily inconvenienced might be grateful to Anon. Throwing the chalk duster in class might get attention but without the followup education its worthless.

      Phillip.

    99. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah because Pro Football is as related to websites as a fucking DNS hoster is. Wake up you idiot, one of the two has a bit more power on your website than the other.

    100. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man chill the fuck out. It's not our fault you're incompetent when it comes to DNS.

    101. Re:You think this is a Game? by horza · · Score: 0

      I also have little sympathy. The GoDaddy boycott was pretty prominent, with anti-SOPA even hitting the front page of Wikipedia. Sure their scummy practices go back many years, but the recent ones were very public. Before when the web was in the hands of the academics, when you didn't get leeches like GoDaddy, life was easy. Any problems and you would cancel the student account of the trouble-maker. Now if you want to be a cheap-skate and give your business to cowboys then that's your fault. Google around for a decent provider and move your account. Just chalk it up to a lesson learned.

      Phillip.

    102. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you use a MasterCard or VISA? Do you watch ABC, follow pro football or basketball, buy books published by Random House, HarperCollins or McGraw-Hill, are a paying member of any of a dozen unions, buy any products made by Revlon, Pfizer, LOreal, Sony and a hundred other companies?

      No, no I do not.

    103. Re:You think this is a Game? by Smallpond · · Score: 1

      Spammers go through 100 domains a month.

    104. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize Godaddy no longer supports SOPA or PIPA right? Or did you only pay attention for five minutes while they were supporting it and miss out on the backlash that followed and their retraction of that support?

    105. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're really missing the point of dns. you can have a number of
      very unreliable dns servers. it doesn't matter as long as one of
      them is up. why would whatever-the-fancy certification give you
      100% uptime? i've even had my bacon saved by a crappy dsl,
      when a data center was taken out by fire.

    106. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sounds like terrorism.

    107. Re:You think this is a Game? by smellotron · · Score: 1

      [GoDaddy's] CEO brags about security being for cadavers,

      If you read the context on his own website you should understand that by "security" he is referring to personal comfort zone, as in "take more risks with your life/business" and the proverbial risk/reward trade-off, in contrast to network/system security which is a risk/convenience trade-off. There are enough examples with which to highlight his sleaziness that you don't need this "security" lie to pin him to the wall.

      Apologies in advance if English is not your primary language.

    108. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A company I used to work for would burn through 100 domains in a matter of hours.

    109. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nuke all those fuckers from orbit. Every single one of them.

    110. Re:You think this is a Game? by Tastecicles · · Score: 1

      Behold, the Internet Tough Guy. Also known as a Keyboard Warrior, he talks big shit online, and doesn't afraid of anything. Always male (for there are no girls on the internet).
      As he will thoroughly explain to you, he is respected and feared by ALL; no way he's skittish to casually throw around ep1c insultz and one-lieners like "go fuck yourself," or "u aint done sucking my dick." He swears a lot just to show how hardcore he is. God help you if you even dare defy him by delivering some sort of retort when he says something to you, or practicing logic on his userpage, or even reading whatever he posted and writing replies of disagreement (or even agreeing responses, in some cases) relating exactly to what you just read ... No, you can't do that. No. No. You don't even know him or what he's about. Internet Tough Guy isn't someone you should mess with, ever. That's right, you cross the line and he will come to your house and fuck you up so bad and rape you so hard and kill you so god damn dead OH SHIT. You must have pissed yourself by now from these horrific threats of bodily harm. Because if someone threatens you online, that's it. Game over man. Game over! You are d-e-a-d, DEAD! Nothing can save you. Not even that new dog you just bought. You might as well kill yourself now...
      Actually, IRL, Internet Tough Guy, there? He's a total fag or a basement-dweller, with a high chance of being a redneck and/or skinhead. Sometimes, the Internet Tough Guy will actually be somewhat "tough." However, this makes him about four times more of a total fag. The sad reality is that these people are a concentrated form of noob, not one of whom can grasp the concept that they obviously are never actually going to be able to make good on their intimidating remarks, or that their low-IQ ramblings do not impress the Internet nor physically affect people on it in any way. More simply put, when nobodies such as themselves make empty threats and loudmouthed, prick statements to unknown persons whom they have never met and do not know the locations of, it does not equal being a badass, becoming dominant to the other users, nor actually going full ass-rape/ass-kick on someone.
      Many Internet Tough Guys are really into computer programming, or, at the bare minimum, love videogaming, heavy metal, and perhaps working for RBS, the investment bank that hires a lot of fake tough guy cunts. The typical Internet Tough Guy can be found in nearly every community on LJ but often resides in his parent's basement for at least 7 days a week. (And not because he's trying to make it into an imaginary apartment, either). Usually, his parents banished him to the unfinished, wet, moldy, cold and dark basement because they couldn't stand either his smell or the fact that he is a disgrace to the family name. 99.9999% chance he is also subject to frequent pwning. By everyone. (He won't admit it, though. He "won" because he swore a lot. And disabled replies.) From furry communities, to fandom communities, to political communities, the Internet Tough Guy is one of the many stock users that make up a community.

      Subspecies

      Furfags
      Many furries who are furries are Internet Tough Guys as well. Fed up with fursecution at the hands of trolls, they often resort to threats of physical violence and will start talking about how much they can bench press. Mentioning muscle mass, level of physical fitness, etc. are all a part of being an Internet Tough Guy. By mentioning this they feel they are intimidating their opponents, but in are reality making them LOL REPEATEDLY. Trolls being everywhere and trolls they are, this induces them. Sometimes they might say to a man who commented on a hot girl that "If she was my daughter, you'd be singing Soprano", when the truth is, this guy DOES sing Soprano, he couldn't find a wife or have kids if he wanted to, and if he really saw you, he'd shit his pants in fear. His disagreement over a hot girl confirms that he's a fag, but most people forget to remind him of that, and take the tough guy

      --
      Operation Guillotine is in effect.
    111. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jerk faces? What are we, in gradeschool?
      You're the idiot who put all your eggs in one basket. Maybe you should think about diversifying your online presence so your business isn't at the mercy of a single provider.

    112. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anonymous does it with the intention, and overall goal of giving power to the people. The government does it to retain power and stymie your freedoms so you can be a good consumer.

      What? Doesn't jive with your utilitaristic tit-for-tat ethics? How about a nice big cup of Immanuel Kant?

    113. Re:You think this is a Game? by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Maybe it isn't about SOPA.. And nobody knows why GoDaddy went off the air.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    114. Re:You think this is a Game? by xenobyte · · Score: 2

      Did aliens just steal 50 IQ-points from everybody here?

      DNS is a distributed system with caches. If your DNS-resolver (which is a cache) had the godaddy.com domain cached before the attack it will continue to resolve until the cache expires, usually 24 hours after being cached. If your DNS-resolver didn't have it cached, it will be unable to fetch the records as the authoritative DNS-servers aren't responding, and thus it will fail to resolve. Some tools, like 'dig' will tell you how long time remains on the cached records.

      --
      "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
    115. Re:You think this is a Game? by c_g_hills · · Score: 1

      If DNS providers would provide a standardised API (or even allow standard dynamic updates with TSIG) it would make it a lot easier to use multiple providers. The two main problems I have come across are that the providers often do not let you add any NS records other than their own servers (so when a resolver caches the NS records and that provider goes down, it won't try using the other provider until the TTL expires), and updating records is painful because it involves logging into each of your providers websites to make the changes.

    116. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and don't have time to muck with moving my site around, hosting DNS here and content there, and the like. I barely have time to maintain content in the middle of a busy research career. I suppose I'm now supposed to be an expert on mathematical modeling + cancer + hosting my own DNS?

      No, but it might not hurt to hire someone who is, or to look around for a hosting provider which uses diverse DNS servers. You went with the bottom of the barrel for hosting providers, and you got a bottom-of-the-barrel service from them. Shop around, and find a shop which has some kind of uptime agreement (often referred to as a SLA- Service Level Agreement).

      And just as a thought, you could also consider getting a second domain name hosted by a different provider which points to the same IP. Then in your emails and invites you can let people know to try the secondary site if the first one isn't resolving. For many people this solution won't work well, but since you seem to have a fairly limited pool of potential visitors it might help you out.

    117. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people will see their favorite site is down, say "Aw, shucks," and check again later.

      No. They'll call their ISP and bitch at some minimum-wage frontline tech support agent that their "internets are all fucked up" and demand their ISP wave a magic wand and "fix" the problem. After enough complaints, someone will escalate a ticket to the networking division, who will eventually send back a reply saying it's a problem with GoDaddy. Customers will assume this is bullshit, and that their ISP is trying to save face. Some will just bitch, some will demand a credit, some will move to another provider. Nobody will hold godaddy responsible other than a few angry system admins.

    118. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm fairly certain the post you replied to was a poor attempt at humor. But thanks for playing.

    119. Re:You think this is a Game? by MrMickS · · Score: 1

      I don't sit on multiple ISPs in a SAS70 rated datacenter. I do however host my own DNS. Its running hosted on a number of servers connected to different ISPs hosted at people's houses. There are outages for these connections but, due to the DNS configuration I'd have to lose all of them for a number of days before my domains disappeared off the internet.

      DNS was designed for an Internet that pre-dated such datacenters, one with slower communications and regular outages. The primary rule is don't but your eggs all in the same basket, or subnet, or datacenter. DNS allows you to remove any single point of failure by its design. To not take advantage of that, preferring to rely on 5 9s uptimes, seems nonsensical.

      --
      You may think me a tired, old, cynic. I'd have to disagree about the tired bit.
    120. Re:You think this is a Game? by helix2301 · · Score: 1

      According to the hackers tweet it was not because of SOPA AnonymousOwn3r said: “I’m not anti go daddy, you guys will understand because I did this attack. I’m taking godaddy down because well i’d like to test how the cyber security is safe and for more reasons that I cannot talk now,” the hacker said in another tweet.

    121. Re:You think this is a Game? by rs79 · · Score: 1

      Bingo.

      DNS is the Schrodinger's cat of the TCP/IP protocol suite.

      As for Godaddy, if you think Bob shot those elephants in accordance with the law you might want to actually read those laws.

      --
      Need Mercedes parts ?
    122. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, and I'll take Six of One from Tripping the Rift

    123. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have never commented on Slashdot, but this. this, this this.

    124. Re:You think this is a Game? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Godaddy does nothing illegal to my knowledge, doesn't exploit children in China, but simply has some philosophical ideas that go against the grain here.

      i thought freedom of thought was a major issue to most of us. Taking someone's business offline because the person they buy services from thinks differently than you is pretty terrible. Godaddy may not be a wonderful supporter of freedoms, but Anonymous just proved itself to be even worse.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    125. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Part of the reason she went crazy was because well... she was crazy to begin with.

    126. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They may have a noble goal, but their methods are not helping them reach that goal. Just look at the ratio of posts here bitching about Anonymous not godaddy and this is a tech site. You can be sure its much worse in the general population.

      These kind of tactics don't work in the real world why would they work any better online?

       

    127. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      I have two DNS servers. They are just on the same provider. Obviously its possible. The implementation is what people need to know about because obviously I'm not the only person with this question.

    128. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      none of that really helps. I know how to set it up if I host my own DNS servers on my own domain. My personal site is completely hosted and I don't run a single server related to that company. So I need to do it with multiple providers who run their own DNS servers. Again, be snarky and keep perpetuating the idea that IT people are jerks.

    129. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, GoDaddy sucks. That doesn't excuse the fact that a lot of innocent sites were knocked offline for political reasons. It's just a different 1% deciding on what's good for us.

    130. Re:You think this is a Game? by richlv · · Score: 1

      huh ? your comment i responded to said nothing about using multiple dns providers. what was snarky about my reply, i fail to see.

      --
      Rich
    131. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      Because you said you thought it was a joke. I'm actually asking. Also if you go back up the chain in the thread you will see that this is about multiple DNS servers.

    132. Re:You think this is a Game? by richlv · · Score: 1

      multiple dns servers does not imply in any way that you are just using somebody's else's servers to store your zone info. even then it is possible to set up zone transfer, as master/slave is per zone. though on slashdot saying "multiple dns servers" most would still assume having control over those servers.

      note that multiple servers are needed and used no matter whether you manage them yourself or not - even when you do that yourself, they are still multiple servers (maybe that caused the confusion ?)

      --
      Rich
    133. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      If you were not being snarky, then I apologize. Its just the way this thread has gone so far.

    134. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      Ok, well let me clear it up. I don't have control over any servers I can set up my zone on. I don't have dedicated or virtual dedicated or physical servers of any kind. I have GoDaddy registration, DNS, and web hosting. The point here is this; how do I avoid relying on GoDaddy's DNS servers as the sole path to resolve DNS to my domaiin name? Keeping in mind I don't have any servers.

    135. Re:You think this is a Game? by richlv · · Score: 1

      aiee. keep in mind that i haven't tried this and i have little experience with hosted dns :)

      as an example that has been mentioned on /. , gandi offers secondary dns server :
      http://wiki.gandi.net/en/domains/dns#gandi-s-secondary-dns

      you would still need a primary somewhere, but once you do, the gandi secondary one should automatically get all the changes you make to the primary one.

      (i'm not affiliated with gandi or even a customer, only have seen them mentioned on /. as a decent provider)

      --
      Rich
    136. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They supported legislation which was purported to be good for business. In the end once they knew the details of the bill, they pulled their support.

      That is hilariously fucktarded.

      GoDaddy helped to write SOPA you fucking clod.

    137. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DNS is an application layer protocol.

      That is what turns me on about you, your attention to detail.

    138. Re:You think this is a Game? by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the information. I'll dig a little more and see if I can get it to work.

    139. Re:You think this is a Game? by i286NiNJA · · Score: 1

      No I'm saying don't be sad when your vacuum cleaner falls apart and you don't have a job because you shop at wal-mart... except in the case of go-daddy you get lied to constantly (like at best buy) and it's expensive (like best buy)

    140. Re:You think this is a Game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, redundancy costs. I suppose some DNS providers will allow you to run slaves but either way if you want two providers and you currently only have one, you'll need to purchase *something*. It will either be a DNS provider or a VPS to provide it yourself.

    141. Re:You think this is a Game? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because issues immediately... SQUIRREL!

    142. Re:You think this is a Game? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      The details were "people will fucking leave our hosting in droves if we keep supporting this out loud." So I'm pretty sure they pulled their public support. Their lobbying? I'm not quite so sure/don't remember.

    143. Re:You think this is a Game? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      Yes.

    144. Re:You think this is a Game? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      You've made a number of very self-important and know-it-all posts about what you need and what this is doing to you. One assumed you knew about something as simple as this or would Google it before asking. Forgive him for thinking you might have been joking.

    145. Re:You think this is a Game? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      We do this at my workplace -- we are the primaries and Cogent does the secondaries

    146. Re:You think this is a Game? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      It is not a difficult change to make. If you're looking for someone to do it for you, let me know.

    147. Re:You think this is a Game? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      +1 on NameCheap. I now have a number of domains with them.

  3. Glad I moved my domains by BooRadley · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Back when GoDaddy was publicly in support of SOPA, I moved away from them. Ended up saving a lot as well.

    No regrets.
     

    --

    -- lk t lv ll th vwls t f wrds. T svs lts f tm t wrt bt ts pn n th ss t rd nd mks m lk lk cmplt dpsht.

    1. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone who "meant to" move away from them... where did you migrate to and are you happy with your new provider?

    2. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also moved my domain after the SOPA crap went down. Switched to namecheap.com and couldn't be happier.

    3. Re:Glad I moved my domains by tibit · · Score: 5, Informative

      I moved to namecheap for domains and hosting, and not only is it cheaper, but the overall experience doesn't leave sour aftertaste. They have been excellent so far.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    4. Re:Glad I moved my domains by kullnd · · Score: 2

      +1 Namecheap.com ... I migrated about half my domains during the SOPA deal, was going to do the rest this month (just ran out of time) .... Now some of my sites are down, and you can bet they will be moved ASAP.

      --
      +++ATH0 NO CARRIER
    5. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Good for you, helping to help fund the man, giving them money so they can improve their service with wonderful investments in female nascar drivers that suck at nascar, aren't really that good looking and stick them in ads that are blatantly "sex sells" to appeal to you, the lowest common denominator.

      You fight that good fight sir.

    6. Re:Glad I moved my domains by i286NiNJA · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Good work! Stand by GoDaddy, pay for expensive web hosting of low quality with a long track record of bad security and customer fucking. If more people were like you folks wouldn't be so quick to shit on the little guy.

    7. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hover.com. Beyond happy. They give you a discount on moving, their support service is fantastic (ask for their concierge service when you move - it's faster and they can make sure niddling details in a complex migration are taken care of), and they don't swamp you with spam and upsell (particularly since most of godaddy's "premium" crap is included like domain name protection and ID security). Plus they're in Canada. Love Canada.

    8. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're an idiot.

    9. Re:Glad I moved my domains by achbed · · Score: 2

      Ditto. Tried a few different hosts, and eventually settled on gandi.net - works like a charm! A little more expensive, but I like the option of having duplicated virtual hosts on two continents just in case of failure...

    10. Re:Glad I moved my domains by heypete · · Score: 1

      I have some domains with NameCheap (which others have pointed out is quite good) and others with Gandi.net.

      NameCheap has somewhat better pricing, but I prefer Gandi for most things. I rather like that Gandi's whois privacy is included by default in the cost of registration with compatible domains (.us, for example, does not allow private registration). The only public information they display is your full name and NIC handle -- the address and phone number are changed to that of their Paris headquarters and the email address is a spam-protected alias. I like that they display your full name, as their policy is that regardless of if you have the privacy service enabled or not your domain is still yours and you own it. Other registrars have the policy that they own (for as long as the whois privacy is enabled) your domain and are leasing it back to you.

    11. Re:Glad I moved my domains by GoodNewsJimDotCom · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yep. I moved from Godaddy when they supported SOPA too.

      All seriousness aside: By looking at the scantily clad women they advertise with, is it any surprise they go down?

    12. Re:Glad I moved my domains by saya13 · · Score: 1

      Back when GoDaddy was publicly in support of SOPA, I moved away from them.

      To where did you move?

    13. Re:Glad I moved my domains by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2, Informative

      I moved from GoDaddy to Namecheap this summer, SOPA was the last straw for me. GoDaddy made it an unpleasant process. Good riddance.

      I don't condone the Anonymous action though. There are lots of good people who use GoDaddy.

      GoDaddy really are bottom feeders though. Anyone using them should go home and re-think their lives.

    14. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm not moving my site. I will not be bullied around. I'm sticking with Godaddy and seeing this through. Besides, my site is only one narrow aspect of my online presence including social media and an image host/seller.

      And Stockholm Syndrome sets in ...

    15. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      GoDaddy is located in Scottsdale, Arizona, which is a haven for sociopaths and assholes, and is the home of the "30,000 dollar a year millionaire".

    16. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I moved to namecheap for domains and hosting, and not only is it cheaper, but the overall experience doesn't leave sour aftertaste. They have been excellent so far.

      I moved form NameCheap to GoDaddy. NameCheap is cheaper and has a much better web control interface, but it goes down all the time, and not from being attacked.

      Tip: register several years through the cheapest group you can find, then add one year (with the "transfer" discount!) with GoDaddy or whomever you'd like to actually host your DNS and control panel. They'll serve you for the whole time.

    17. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you are changing your host as a result of this attack. Well then, if Anonymous really did this in retaliation for SOPA support, I suppose terrorism does work.

    18. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone using them should go home and re-think their lives.

      A little over the top, don't you think. Jerk.

    19. Re:Glad I moved my domains by girlintraining · · Score: 5, Funny

      All seriousness aside: By looking at the scantily clad women they advertise with, is it any surprise they go down?

      I think those scantily clad women are very disappointed it can't stay up as well.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    20. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Bryansix · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Expensive by what standards? My work uses Total Choice Hosting. They cost more and their support is MUCH MUCH worse. I can get Godaddy on the phone in under 30 seconds and they know the answer to my questions. My website just went down for the first time in 5 years. I run Wordpress and I've never been hacked. They don't force updates on my but make it stupid simple to migrate to a new version of MySQL on my own without being on the phone with them. They give me the access and control I want and need and their website is fairly easy to navigate. You might think your hyperbole is smart but in reality it ignores the state of the marketplace.

    21. Re:Glad I moved my domains by kullnd · · Score: 1

      No, I was already moving my stuff from them in response to SOPA.... The stuff not moved yet was not moved because it was not expired, and I didnt have the money to move everything all at once. The remaining expiration dates are approaching. I have not purchased or renewed anything from GoDaddy since the SOPA event.

      --
      +++ATH0 NO CARRIER
    22. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Sardaukar86 · · Score: 1

      Anyone using them should go home and re-think their lives.

      A little over the top, don't you think. Jerk.

      It's a quote from The Phantom Menace if memory serves.

      Whoops, nearly forgot the ad-hominen: Jerk!

      --
      ..Mullah or Pope, Preacher or Poet, who was it wrote: "Give any one species too much rope and they'll fuck it up"?
    23. Re:Glad I moved my domains by heezer7 · · Score: 0

      Slowly moving here too but have not got them all transferred.

    24. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This too shall pass. It's an outage. They happen. People should plan for them, whatever the reason. Maybe it'll be a good jolt to some people to get off GoDaddy finally.

    25. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This guy is indeed an idiot. He shouldn't be on slashdot at all. He was asking DNS questions elsewhere in comments to this post. Shocking that he even found his way here.

    26. Re:Glad I moved my domains by jittles · · Score: 1

      Its just their DNS. I bought several domains there years ago with 10 years of registration. I don't host my DNS there and my sites were completely unaffected. And I am certainly not going to move my hosting and lose my prepaid registration fees because they are one of hundreds of companies that supported SOPA.

    27. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Back when GoDaddy was publicly in support of SOPA, I moved away from them.

      Marvellous. But why were you ever a customer with them in the first place?

      Didn't you do any research before entrusting them with your online presence?

    28. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Calm down Bob.

    29. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ad-hominem is a fallacy, it is not name calling.

      It drives me nuts when people use that term to describe simple name calling in an attempt to make themselves seem smarter.

      In reality people equating name-calling with ad-hominem are fucking retards that are always wrong!

    30. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How the fuck is this terrorism?

      Did this action actually scare you.

      Fucking coward.

    31. Re:Glad I moved my domains by wamatt · · Score: 1

      Also moved to Namecheap. Additionally would recommend DNS Made Easy for DNS hosting.

      Amazingly fast multicast. multi-geo and economical DNS. Also love their useful (albeit proprietary) ANAME record.

    32. Re:Glad I moved my domains by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      Sounds like the perfect PR campaign: they have their usual array of scantily clad women with silicon tits, saying:

      "We're so sorry we went down on you like that."

      "We really didn' mean to suck alllll that ... hard work out of you."

      "But rest assured, we'll be doing our very best in the future to help you keep it firmly up alllll the time."

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    33. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot.

      No, the idiot is whatever simpleton modded you up to +2 Insightful.

    34. Re:Glad I moved my domains by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I went before that, but I don't remember why except that they sucked. I went to justhost (affiliate link at the bottom of my webpage) and they've been pretty excellent. Price has stayed pretty much the same, performance has actually improved, and support has been responsive.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    35. Re:Glad I moved my domains by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      Nobody should ever ask questions at all. Good job. Now its obvious why people sometime hate IT workers. Stuck up and snobbish.

    36. Re:Glad I moved my domains by i286NiNJA · · Score: 1

      Where did I ask a DNS question? Earlier you said I think people should be murdered for shopping at wal-mart and that expecting to lose money when you involve idiots in your business was like saying you should be expected to be raped for wearing a provocative dress.

      I think you're trying to get people to mod me down or something, does getting modded down a few times have much impact on your ability to use slashdot... really i want to know? I've asked people to mod me down as a joke before (and they did). In any case you're not having much success.

    37. Re:Glad I moved my domains by ryanov · · Score: 1

      IT workers have very little tolerance for people who are in over their head working in IT and who refuse to RTFM before answering an educated question. If I had to teach myself most of what I know, why should I do free consulting work for you? Most IT workers who can see you've tried are more than happy to politely help you. The same, for that matter, goes for speaking English in France. Try to speak French first and the whole situation changes.

    38. Re:Glad I moved my domains by ryanov · · Score: 1

      This was obviously not directed at you. Read carefully.

    39. Re:Glad I moved my domains by ryanov · · Score: 1

      My dad used them too, and my workplace does as well (why I'm not in charge of that where I work, I don't know -- I am in charge of the DNS servers, only to find the guy who is in charge of domain registrations has mucked around without telling me -- but I digress). If you don't know much about DNS, they are VERY visible. And if your site doesn't matter much (like my dad's), it doesn't make too much difference.

    40. Re:Glad I moved my domains by ryanov · · Score: 1

      I personally moved to NameCheap.

  4. "Activism" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hmm, attacking innocent people at random, could have sworn there was some other word for that...

    1. Re:"Activism" by Bryansix · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Terrorism. There I said it.

    2. Re:"Activism" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The goal wasn't to instill fear or terror.

      So you are wrong and stupid. You should feel bad about that.

    3. Re:"Activism" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should he feel bad - he was joking, obviously. And what was the goal then? To screw up my work day? If so then well done assholes.

    4. Re:"Activism" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet there's a tasty penis down your throat right now. Does it tickle?

    5. Re:"Activism" by amirishere · · Score: 1

      collateral damage?

    6. Re:"Activism" by vlm · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hmm, attacking innocent people at random, could have sworn there was some other word for that...

      "US Military Drone Attack" Hmm thats 4 words.

      "Civil forfeiture" Hmm 2 words.

      "Obama" or "Bush" ? Yeah I founds it.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    7. Re:"Activism" by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Hmm, attacking innocent people at random, could have sworn there was some other word for that...
      Well I suppose if I disagree with Wal-mart not using union labor, it would be perfectly acceptable for me to go and slash the tires of all of Wal-mart's customers. That'll teach Wal-Mart!

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    8. Re:"Activism" by Voyager529 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, attacking innocent people at random, could have sworn there was some other word for that...

      Well I suppose if I disagree with Wal-mart not using union labor, it would be perfectly acceptable for me to go and slash the tires of all of Wal-mart's customers. That'll teach Wal-Mart!

      That analogy only works if you only slash the tires of customers who purchased tires at Wal-Mart who bought them under the pretenses that the tires were impervious to 99.999% of knives, and Wal-Mart tires inherently included internal canisters of Fix-A-Flat, but it took them four hours to find the activate-switch, which union workers would have had under control in 5 minutes or less.

      There was a lot of opportunity cost lost by GoDaddy customers, but they didn't have to pay to get their websites back up once DNS came back, so comparing destruction of property that remains destroyed until the user replaces it with a website that works just fine once either the DDOS stops or the traffic is successfully isolated.

    9. Re:"Activism" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...which union workers would have had under control in 5 minutes or less

      Here's a guy who's never had to rely on a union to get anything done.

    10. Re:"Activism" by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      There was a lot of opportunity cost lost by GoDaddy customers, but they didn't have to pay to get their websites back up once DNS came back, so comparing destruction of property that remains destroyed until the user replaces it with a website that works just fine once either the DDOS stops or the traffic is successfully isolated.
      There is a certain non-zero dollar value of permanent destruction that was caused by this temporary loss. My company, for reasons which are not known by me, uses godaddy as their DNS service. We had customers that were not able to access our site and therefore not able to perform their work. That costs our customers money, and costs us in terms of reputation and real dollars in terms of SLAs. Undoubtely we should have some alternate DNS service. I don't know about stuff like that as it is not my department. Apparently, the department whose business it is to know that stuff also doesn't know that stuff. But what anonymous did caused real people to lose real dollars through no fault of their own.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    11. Re:"Activism" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try "Vietnam".

    12. Re:"Activism" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds to me like the goal was to hurt godaddy by hurting their customers and costing them business. At least thats the impression I get from reading slashdot and the many many many posts expressing the thought that "that's what you get for using godaddy."

      So if that wasn't the goal then what was it?

    13. Re:"Activism" by ryanov · · Score: 1

      Doing things more safely in many cases does take longer. Yes, it was easier to get, for example, construction done faster in the old days. I would like to think we've come a long way.

  5. Hrmph by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you use GoDaddy, I guess you'd be expecting this to happen.

    1. Re:Hrmph by Bryansix · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because they hacked an exploitable DNS system which every provider on the planet uses? Yeah, totally saw that one coming.

    2. Re:Hrmph by dshk · · Score: 2

      According to the article, it is a DDOS, not a hack. And GoDaddy indeed has a very bad name, at least here on Slashdot. I never made business with them, once I checked their domain registration offer, but it contained some obviously (for IT pros) misleading sales pitch, and that was enough for me one.

    3. Re:Hrmph by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Glad you could join us.

    4. Re:Hrmph by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was wondering when the spokesman of the "tech world" would chime in.

    5. Re:Hrmph by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Check out the updated news on TechCrunch today. GoDaddy's interim CEO Scot Wagener now reports that the problem was an internal router system failure and NOT an external DDoS attack orchestrated by Anonymous. The /. headline should be changed since it is now clear that Anonymous had nothing at all to do with this outage.

  6. Bob Parsons quote by suso · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bob Parsons, who created GoDaddy, once said "Security is for cadavers" when giving business advice to the general public.

    1. Re:Bob Parsons quote by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 4, Funny

      I was going to be all like "citation required" and shit, but then I looked and I found this:

      Bob Parsons' 16 Rules

      (Yes. It's down at time of writing. That's the joke.)

    2. Re:Bob Parsons quote by suso · · Score: 3, Informative

      Its his only quote on wikiquote among other places: http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Bob_Parsons

    3. Re:Bob Parsons quote by amicusNYCL · · Score: 2

      It's online now, and that happens to be his #1 rule:

      Get and stay out of your comfort zone.

      I believe that not much happens of any significance when we're in our comfort zone. I hear people say, "But I'm concerned about security." My response to that is simple: "Security is for cadavers."

      I guess he's not in his comfort zone. Which must mean Anonymous is doing him a favor.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    4. Re:Bob Parsons quote by Dishevel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      +5 Insightful.
      For a quote taken out of context that means nothing even close to the implication.
        full quote is

      I believe that not much happens of any significance when we're in our comfort zone. I hear people say, "But I'm concerned about security." My response to that is simple: "Security is for cadavers.

      He is talking about your own personal comfort zone.
      Of course you either already knew that or were you just ignorantly posting stuff you heard but never understood?

      Of course I still do not like GoDaddy.
      I just dislike liars even more.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    5. Re:Bob Parsons quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the most impressive instance of out of context quoting I've ever seen.

      For reference, the quote is here: http://www.bobparsons.me/bp_16_rules.php?ci=21428 and it's referring to people who want to be "safe" and stay in their comfort zone. It's not referring to network security.

    6. Re:Bob Parsons quote by swell · · Score: 1

      I've been doing business with Bob for over 20 years.

      He used to sell Mac software dirt cheap. Simple but functional programs that accomplished some goal effortlessly. I think he lived in Iowa at the time, had a family, was a slightly religious nut.

      Don't know what's happened in recent years but he seems to be the Hugh Hefner of the hosting world now. I hope he recovers, not as a Jesus freak but as a sensible person who can make the internet a better place.

      --
      ...omphaloskepsis often...
    7. Re:Bob Parsons quote by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Bob Parsons, who created GoDaddy, once said "Security is for cadavers" when giving business advice to the general public.

      I just dislike liars even more.

      But your own comment supports the assertion...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    8. Re:Bob Parsons quote by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2

      And its terribly out of context ... he's talking about the difference between going out on a limb to do something risky and sticking to the safe route.

      It could be rephrased as "not taking risks is for cadavers."

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  7. It was NOT Anonymous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Anonymous member AnonymousOwn3r has stated that this was not an Anonymous operation, and that he did this by himself.

    1. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by kaizendojo · · Score: 5, Funny

      So an Anonymous Coward comments that this was NOT Anonymous, but Anonymous member AnonymousOwn3r??!?

      Should I beleive *ANY* of this or what???

    2. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by guises · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'd really like the fact that this had nothing to do with Anonymous to be in the headline. Random attacks like this, credited to Anonymous, really undermine what they're doing when they target someone over a real issue - Wikileaks, Scientology, etc.

    3. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It wasn't Anonymous, it was the rival group Pseudonymous. But of course they can't call themselves Pseudonymous, because then they wouldn't be; so they call themselves Anonymous.

    4. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you believe the US Government or the FBI considering their track record, then I'd say Anonymous Coward, is a very upstanding reliable, non-biased, civic minded source.

      We live in the age of information, compared to the past few hundred of years, it simply means the volume of lies increases with the volume of information. Read everything, believe nothing. There might be a grain of truth somewhere, but you need a lot of life (real life) experience to read between the lines.

    5. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And posting underage girl's personal information on the internet and asking people to harass them.

    6. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by lottameez · · Score: 1

      He also tweeted that it wasn't because he was anti-big daddy. i guess that should eliminate about 95% of the comments on this story.

      --
      Yeah? Well I think you're overrated too.
    7. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by adameros · · Score: 5, Informative

      I was the one to my the "Anonymous Coward" comment because I was too lazy to login, but I'm not too lazy to back my post up with facts, especially when a dumbass would rather mock the poster than actually address what was said. Here is the Tech Crunch article where they admit their mistake and stop blaming Anonymous: http://techcrunch.com/2012/09/10/godaddy-outage-takes-down-millions-of-sites/ Here is where the person taking credit says it was not Anonymous, but a solo act: https://twitter.com/AnonymousOwn3r/status/245227793334546432 Anything relevant you would like to add, kaizendojo? Or just more worthless snark?

    8. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      According to many people's definition, he IS 'Anonymous', because 'Anonymous' isn't a coordinated group of people, but people who usually work alone, (but have the same mentality/motivations as other 'members'). That's the whole point.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    9. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      cute.

    10. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's so convincing without a link fag.

    11. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by inKubus · · Score: 1

      When I saw that Godaddy was down, I lol'd (since I have nothing hosted with them since around 2007 when they deleted 6 virtual servers of which they and I did not have backups of).. So I'd say the anonymous responsible was carrying on the mission of anonymous pretty well, because I lol'd.

      --
      Cool! Amazing Toys.
    12. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I'd really like the fact that this had nothing to do with Anonymous to be in the headline. Random attacks like this, credited to Anonymous, really undermine what they're doing when they target someone over a real issue - Wikileaks, Scientology, etc.

      Yes, that's the problem you face when you have a "group" which has no formal membership, no declared goals (other than "lulz"), no policies, no enforcement, and which anybody can "join" simply by saying they are part of it.

    13. Re:It was NOT Anonymous. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And now even GoDaddy admits that the problem was caused by internal router table corruption and NOT by an Anonymous DDoS attack. The Anonymous0wn3r twitter handle was created as an excuse to blame someone else for their incompetence.

  8. what was the point of this? by logicassasin · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I guess somewhere down the line we may get an answer, but I really have to wonder: Why GoDaddy?

    --
    Fifty watts per channel, baby cakes.
    1. Re:what was the point of this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IT is pointing out a weakness of how we currently use DNS. We need more redundancy, and a less centralized system and then it would be more robust. But then you would have a harder time controlling it and charging people fees.

    2. Re:what was the point of this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They supported SOPA (in fact they worked with the legislators on crafting the legislation such that Go Daddy would have immunity).

    3. Re:what was the point of this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They supported SOPA (in fact they worked with the legislators on crafting the legislation such that Go Daddy would have immunity).

      Aaaaaaand the reason they didn't do this way back when this was, y'know, relevant — to the point where we wouldn't have someone on Slashdot wondering why they did this — is?

    4. Re:what was the point of this? by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      What's the big mystery? Exposure is the obvious reason. Now I'm sitting here and know that there is someone in Brazil with too much time on his hands who likes calling himself "AnonymousOwn3r". I didn't know that yesterday, and I probably still wouldn't know it if he took down vistaPages or Vodahost or whoever else. Not that I'm going to do anything with that pearl of knowledge, but I'm sure he's getting iFellated in whatever IRC channel he hangs out in.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
  9. Are they really taking credit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Doesn't seem like Anonymous is particularly united in their belief this had anything to do with them.

    Although Anonymous takes full responsibility for the fact that I am a Coward.

  10. Make it stop. by transposia · · Score: 1

    Didn't realize we were still using GoDaddy DNS... but I wish this would end already!

  11. In other things that are totally news by JustAnotherIdiot · · Score: 1

    An elderly lady crossed the sidewalk, Anonymous claims responsibility.

    --
    What do I know, I'm just an idiot, right?
  12. Now how will we "see what happens next"? by Kenja · · Score: 1

    Those G rated porn TV commercials now just mock me!

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
  13. Misleading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not Anonymous as in the collective and endorsed, it's just him on his own as he tweeted himself.

    Captcha: Infamous, nice

  14. We need a new DNS system by JDG1980 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Events like this further underline why we need a new secure, distributed DNS system, one that is not subject to tampering by either Anonymous or ICE. Yes, there's a huge installed base issue to deal with, but DNS is falling apart, and if things continue the way they have been, the Internet may be completely balkanized across national lines in a few more years.

    1. Re:We need a new DNS system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you just need to do a better job of checking out what is going on out there and who you are using for DNS support. Check into OpenDNS, they are actually reporting that Godaddy sites' are being accessed through OpenDNS. They are the best!

    2. Re:We need a new DNS system by TCM · · Score: 1

      You mean the OpenDNS that fakes records that don't exist?

      --
      Of course it runs NetBSD. BTC: 1NT7QvbetmANwaMzhpVL6
    3. Re:We need a new DNS system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      OpenDNS is terrible. They fuck with domain record instead of NXDOMAINing like they are supposed to. Screw those bastards.

    4. Re:We need a new DNS system by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1

      Events like this further underline why we need a new secure, distributed DNS system, , one that is not subject to tampering by either Anonymous or ICE.

      "new" and "secure" are oxymorons.

      So is "secure" and "distributed".

      It is important to parse the difference between a problem in implementation vs a problem in specification. If an implementation failure allowed compromise then using it as an example for the need to fix DNS is not appropriate.

      In my view DNS need only be as reliable as the underlying network.

      We know from experience what happens with anything requiring planet scale trust anchors. They are either never implemented (DNSSEC) or fail spectacularly when they are (HTTPS).

      but DNS is falling apart, and if things continue the way they have been, the Internet may be completely balkanized across national lines in a few more years

      The same holds for any system where power is sufficiently aggregated outside government control. If DNS did not do a sufficient job do you think governments would just throw in the towl and stop there? They wouldn't go after transit?

      If anything allowing them to play games with DNS provides some insulation against even more egregious intervention.

      In my view the only solution is to knowingly give up the idea/myth of security and implement something only good enough to be usefully reliable. Something with no chance of ever making it through todays IETF.

    5. Re:We need a new DNS system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OpenDNS is terrible. They fuck with domain record instead of NXDOMAINing like they are supposed to. Screw those bastards.

      No, that's their free public DNS, you can sign up with them to get access to servers which return the NX record instead of returning a redirect link.

      Look, I'll be blunt with you. If returning a redirect URL instead of the non-existent record response causes you any problems, then you're not using the response properly to start with. NX does NOT mean the domain doesn't exist, it means that the server you're querying was unable to locate a record, and has now cached an empty record which usually has a much lower TTL than a positive record would have.

      I'm not defending the practice, but honestly it's not worth getting your panties knotted up over.

    6. Re:We need a new DNS system by rs79 · · Score: 1
      --
      Need Mercedes parts ?
  15. Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by alphax45 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not saying that people that choose Go Daddy deserve to have their sites down, I don't blame the victim for choosing them as their provider, however Go Daddy is not exactly the most ethical company. I can see why they would be targeted in such an attack.

    --
    K Man
    1. Re:Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then be swayed by the lower prices, higher security (obviously), and less customer-screwing policies of other registrars, vocal minority be damned.

    2. Re:Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not that this ( http://www.volokh.com/2012/09/08/draft-executive-order-on-cybersecurity-leaks/ ) could have anything to do with today's activities.

      It's time to line these Anonymous bastards up against the wall and shoot them...

    3. Re:Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by zerro · · Score: 1

      why is parent not modded down trolling?? seriously!?

    4. Re:Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      How come you're so eager to "double down" on a web host with one of the worst online reputations? Do you think you're sending some sort of message to "hackers" by doing so? Here's the message you're sending: you're saying you don't care about reliable hosting, that you're willing to stay with GoDaddy and continue to pay them because you don't want to make any effort to find a better deal. They know that, and they will continue to provide the same level of service without seeing a need to improve.

      Look into Hostgator, or Siteocity. If you really want to stay with a big company with failing customer support, maybe try Softlayer instead of GoDaddy.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    5. Re:Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      It would help your argument if you had facts. I went with GoDaddy initially because they were the lowest priced, had the least technical problems, and have excellent customer support. I don't know where you get your information but it is not factual.

    6. Re:Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      Because I'm not trolling. Show me some facts. Show me that other hosts are actually cheaper while keeping the same quality service. You know how many problems I have had with GoDaddy in hosting with them for 5 years? Zero problems. My site is active too and I have had no problems with the hosting whatsoever.

    7. Re:Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      Again, where are the facts? Where are the examples? You have none. Stop just making shit up.

    8. Re:Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      I went with GoDaddy initially because they were the lowest priced, had the least technical problems, and have excellent customer support.

      That's great, but considering that's no longer necessarily true, my question is what is your reason for "doubling down". Hostgator, for example, has had 100% uptime since April (they guarantee 99.9%). They also have cheaper hosting plans than GoDaddy. Domain registration has fairly consistent pricing, I don't see a reason to register with GoDaddy and be subjected to their crap just to save a dollar or two (if that). Dyn.com can host all the DNS records you want, that's what they specialize in. I just don't see any reason to use GoDaddy, so I'm just wondering why you're so eager to go whole hog for them.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    9. Re:Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      I went with GoDaddy initially because they were the lowest priced, had the least technical problems, and have excellent customer support.

      That's great, but considering that's no longer necessarily true, my question is what is your reason for "doubling down". Hostgator, for example, has had 100% uptime since April (they guarantee 99.9%). They also have cheaper hosting plans than GoDaddy. Domain registration has fairly consistent pricing, I don't see a reason to register with GoDaddy and be subjected to their crap just to save a dollar or two (if that). Dyn.com can host all the DNS records you want, that's what they specialize in. I just don't see any reason to use GoDaddy, so I'm just wondering why you're so eager to go whole hog for them.

      Godaddy Price on .com domains: $14.99 (currently $12.99 and volume and year discounts)
      Hostgater Price on .com domains: $15.00 a year all the time
      Advantage Godaddy

      GoDaddy economy hosting (Windows or Linux): 1 year for $5.69 a month
      Hostgater price on hatchling hosting: 1 year for $5.56 a month
      Advantage HostGater

      Hostgater is cheaper only if you commit to 2-3 years of hosting at a time

      Backend maintenance:
      Hostgater; CPanel
      GoDaddy: Custom dashboard that extends far beyond what CPanel can do. Custom utilities to make migrating databases easier. Context Sensitive help buttons located on every page.

      Advantage GoDaddy

      So the differences are not that huge. In addition, the hosting at GoDaddy did not go down. DNS resolution did and for that any provider is just as vulnerable to DDOS attacks.

    10. Re:Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      Any provider is vulnerable to certain common flaws in DNS, or DDOS attacks in general, but not all providers are incompetent.

      Anyway, I don't have any skin in the game, I don't care who you host with. Apparently your reasoning is that GoDaddy has a better control panel than the industry-standard WHM/cPanel, and I can't comment on that because I have no experience with GoDaddy's control panel. I'll continue using my dedicated servers at Cybertrails, you do what you want to do, and we're both happy (assuming our sites aren't offline, that is).

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    11. Re:Not like Go Daddy is a "good" company.... by ryanov · · Score: 1

      Jesus Christ, do your own homework.

  16. Re:Here's what you do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But you should only do it for the lulz.

  17. Don't use the godaddy DNS and you'll be fine by hwstar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you have registered your domain with Godaddy, and used a third party DNS, everything will be fine. I've found it's better to use a 3rd party DNS as it allows more flexibility in managing the domain name.

    1. Re:Don't use the godaddy DNS and you'll be fine by cHiphead · · Score: 1

      What "more flexibility" is allowed on a third party DNS vs. Godaddy's domain manager? (Honest question, I've used both and until today never had a DNS outage with GD and there is no missing functionality from GD's domain manager that I have discerned)

      --

      This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    2. Re:Don't use the godaddy DNS and you'll be fine by randomnote1 · · Score: 1

      What 3rd party DNS managers would you suggest (or have you used)?

  18. Maybe APK is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just dump the whole DNS tree into your hosts file! It was genius all along!

    1. Re:Maybe APK is right by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 1

      Careful...say those letters three times in a row and he appears to drag the forum down into a morass of insanely long, boring and redundant posts congratulating himself for his genius in compiling a list.

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
    2. Re:Maybe APK is right by crutchy · · Score: 1
      lmfaoroflomfgapkisatotaldouche

      Careful...say those letters three times in a row and he appears to drag the forum down into a morass of insanely long, boring and redundant posts congratulating himself for his genius in compiling a list.

      so true... oh shit i think i can smell his stink now....

    3. Re:Maybe APK is right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      High on my /. wishlist is collapsible comments. Wearing out my mouse wheel scrolling through that junk. Anon cuz OT.

      Captcha: antidisestablishmentarianism

  19. Someone should email them by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 4, Funny

    you know, to let them know their network is down.

    --
    Join the Slashcott! Feb 10 thru Feb 17!
    1. Re:Someone should email them by mrnick · · Score: 1

      Apparently they have been using twitter to communicate...
      http://www.latimes.com/business/technology/la-fi-tn-godaddy-sites-down-20120910,0,3446985.story

      My domain is down, because I use their DNS (not their hosting), very irritating!

      --

      Encryption: I may not agree with what you say, but I will defend your right to encrypt it...
    2. Re:Someone should email them by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      you know, to let them know their network is down.

      I've tried that before, when a client's hosted service (against my recommendation) would only send a TCP RST in response to anything. They replied that it was a problem on our end, despite the pcap attachment showing otherwise.

      The only winning move is not to play the game.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  20. Good thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good thing I've been slowly moving my domains over to another host anyway... I'm sick of Godaddy's Tyranny... and pricing.

    The domains that I still have on godaddy seem to be functioning just fine though.

    1. Re:Good thing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's good that they still work. Do an ipconfig /flushdns to make sure they continue to work.

  21. Danica OK by trevc · · Score: 2, Funny

    The important question that needs to be answered; is Danica Patrick OK?

    1. Re:Danica OK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      She's alright, but kind of upset they can't keep it up.

    2. Re:Danica OK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you kiddin, she's exhausted from standing around on their page all day long. Girl deserved a brake.

  22. Who instead of Go Daddy? by tepples · · Score: 1

    My domain is registered with Gandi, but my web site is on Go Daddy. I feel like switching to another provider. What entry-level web hosting provider would you recommend using instead of Go Daddy? Is Dreamhost much better?

    1. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Dreamhost is terrible. I've had good luck with BlueHost.com for a few people who wanted inexpensive.

    2. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you need to check out OpenDNS ;)

    3. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by heypete · · Score: 4, Informative

      If you're already with Gandi, check out their Simple Hosting. It's pretty slick, as far as basic hosting goes: you get your own Apache/MySQL/PHP processes, the web server runs with the same permissions as your user account (so setting up stuff like WordPress is trivial as there's no permissions-related issues), can host multiple separate sites on a single instance, etc.

      Their VPSs are pretty standard paravirtualized Xen systems which work out pretty well (I ran a Team Fortress 2 gameserver for a while on one and it was stable and reliable).

      As a domain customer you get a 50% discount code for the first year ($30/year rather than $60/year).

      Disclaimer: Gandi customer, not employed by them in any way.

    4. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by thisisfutile · · Score: 0

      We're using DiscountASP.net and because I didn't set it up, I can't say how comparable their rates are but I can say the service has been pretty solid. In 3 years we've only been down for a couple of minutes due to problems on their end. When there is an issue, they're pretty quick to resolve it and they keep you updated on their forums.

    5. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I switched to name.com... Seems Good an cheaper than godaddy

    6. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by detritus. · · Score: 1
    7. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by vlm · · Score: 1

      What entry-level web hosting provider would you recommend using instead of Go Daddy?

      Everyone loves hurricane electric. Rather than using a webhost everyone hates like godaddy, why not use a webhost everyone loves like he.net, even ex-customers like me? Trust me, no one is stupid enough to hire me as a booth babe, so you know this is not astroturfing.

      And I don't wanna hear comments from the peanut gallery about how they're not the cheapest. Yes, not being the cheapest is often a side effect of not sucking.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    8. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I use WebFaction for my company's site and my personal site. Their panel is pretty easy to use, and the service is reliable. They're based in the UK, however, so your card will show a "foreign transaction fee" if you're in the US.

    9. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > you get your own Apache/MySQL/PHP processes, the web server runs with the same permissions as your user account....

      ah what a beautiful setting! Congratulations!

    10. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by yooy · · Score: 1

      nearlyfreespeach.net or hostgator.com customer service at hostgator is OUTSTANDING Avoid: 1and1

    11. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by matazar · · Score: 1

      I use HawkHost.com for my sites. Been using them for a few years, never had any issues. Slowly switching my domains over to my own box at softlayer, but that's just because I want the control.

    12. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by LodCrappo · · Score: 5, Informative

      You mean the advertising company that makes its profits by hijacking DNS requests?? The company that breaks things like MX lookups by default? The company that takes advantage of dimwits who thing anything with the word "Open" in the name is actually somehow open? That OpenDNS?

      --
      -Lod
    13. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by xaxa · · Score: 1

      They're based in the UK, however, so your card will show a "foreign transaction fee" if you're in the US.

      They seem cheap (but it's years since I last looked at this stuff), but it's a bit annoying that they don't seem to have an option to charge me (in the UK) in pounds.

    14. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Out of curiosity, what problems have you had with Dreamhost? They've been rock solid for me.

      Now GoDaddy... *that* was terrible. Their UNIX boxes had process limits measured in seconds, which meant that just trying to upload a single RAW image file tended to fail about eight times out of ten. And in spite of those limits, their web servers would frequently stall for the better part of a minute before replying to an HTTP request. They were horribly managed hacks. It is no surprise that anonymous could DDOS their systems. I doubt it took more than one machine on a moderately fast connection and five lines of shell script.

      Oh, and when I asked them to move me to a different server, they said no. I cancelled my account less than a week after I first set it up.

      I've been using DH ever since, and have had no problems. To be fair, I'm mostly serving static content right now (except for a custom PHPBB instance with a custom authentication system that I'm just starting to set up). YMMV if you are trying to run Wordpress or something similarly bloated and heavyweight.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    15. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      NearlyFreeSpeech is okay as long as you don't need lots of disk space. Otherwise it's very expensive.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    16. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like Gandi too. We have a domain name with them and SSL. We also use Dotster for VPS. Although I wasn't too happy with Dotster's response to lots of DMCA complaints. These weren't valid complaints as we were operating and exit node. While they didn't shut the VPS down they forwarded the notice and each time we responded. Finally they said they wouldn't cooperate with us (essentially) even though there was never any piracy and there were no valid DMCA notices. We were forced to disable the exit node. It probably would have been fine had we censored the connection and blocked certain things. That isn't the point though. My point is there were options and they could have worked with us and didn't. Better than most? Sure. Better than all others? No.

    17. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by skelly33 · · Score: 2

      I second that - their customer service sucks, flat out. Our webmaster passed away and with her went the master password for our corporate account at Dreamhost. A seemingly trivial matter for someone in customer service to handle, but after 8 months of trying they still have not successfully recovered access to the account. They have *never* received a return phone call or email back from Dreamhost support people. That includes even looking up Deamhost employees on their own site's staff directory, including the CEO himself via LinkedIn, sending emails directly to staff members, developers, IT folks, anyone we could find in the company to urge *someone* to return a damn phone call or email. Nothing. the best part was the phone number listed on their website that appeared to go to one guy's cell phone voicemail. Utter BS. I'm not going to promote GoDaddy hosting, but there are far better companies out there to deal with than Dreamhost. Don't just pick the first one you see advertising over 20 million suckers paying them every month...

    18. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by Minupla · · Score: 1

      You might also check out http://www.canadawebhosting.com/. I've been involved in several projects using them and been happy with the results.

      Min

      --
      On the whole, I find that I prefer Slashdot posts to twitter ones because I don't get limited to 140 chars before
    19. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      Well, there was that time that Dreamhost billed their entire customer base for three years of service in one go because their Perl script that charges everyone had no safeguards against being run for the wrong date.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    20. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by dubbreak · · Score: 1

      Dreamhost is terrible. I've had good luck with BlueHost.com for a few people who wanted inexpensive.

      How so? I've used dreamhost for a few years (as have some friends) and have had 0 problems. All super low bandwidth sites mind you. So what happened with dreamhost to make you say they are terrible? It's fine to have an opinion, but you should back it up somehow.

      I was using webhostingbuzz before but did have a few issues (lost some db data when they did something to a server and they were't able to recover it.. some outages they didn't credit for) plus they raised their prices.
      br> I had some issues with dns setting in the panel of hostmonster on someone's site I was helping with (changes were locked out when they shouldn't have been). But live help fixed the issues quickly.

      --
      "If you are going through hell, keep going." - Winston Churchill
    21. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by belg4mit · · Score: 2

      HostGator. I've used BlueHost too, but HostGator's been more responsive and techie friendly.

      --
      Were that I say, pancakes?
    22. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      And there's a hosting provider that has never made a billing error?

      The only people who could get seriously screwed by such a mistake are people who paid for a service costing hundreds or thousands of dollars on a debit card. Those folks have reason to be angry if they got hit with overdraft fees, but most banks will refund those fees (since the charge that caused them was in error) assuming the person calls the bank and explains the situation.

      Most of their customers probably didn't even notice it unless they hit a monthly billing cycle within about a two or three day period....

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    23. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by petermgreen · · Score: 2

      Personally I wouldn't put my name registrations and my hosting (ideally including DNS hosting) in the same place. There are a couple of reasons for this.

      Firstly afaict when the shit hits the fan at a domain name register it is common for the entries in the registery to stay in place but the admin interface to be down. When the shit hits the fan at a hosting provider it is very likely that everything they host goes down. So if your registeration and hosting are at the same provider and the shit hits the fan there you are screwed.If your registration and hosting are at different providers and the shit hits the fan at your regsitration provider you will probablly be ok in the short term. If your registration and hosting are at different providers and the shit hits the fan at your hosting provider then you can move hosting provider.

      Secondly it seems prudent to minimise the chance of disputes with a company who can hold your domains hostage by not using them for anything but domain registration.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    24. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You really shouldn't use the same company for hosting and domain names.

    25. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      What gets me about HE is they don't seem to post their prices anywhere on their website (with the exception of a link advertising ip transit for $1/mbps but giving no details on what requirements you have to meet to get that price...). Their web hosting signup page even asks for credit card details without telling you how much you will be paying!

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    26. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

      I'll second the Bluehost recommendation. I've used them for years, no complaints. However, I used GoDaddy to register my domain eons ago (and have the auto annual renewal, which is coming up shortly) Who would you recommend in place of GD? They were always pretty cheap.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    27. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by heypete · · Score: 1

      Good advice. In my case, Gandi is my registar and web host (I rather like their hosting plans, as they tend not to suck), but the DNS is provided by CloudFlare (who sits in front of the site as a reverse proxy). If needed, I can have CloudFlare point the DNS elsewhere until the S stops HTF.

    28. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      Well, that particular billing error is actually quite unique in it's incompetence, overshadowed only by the PR catastrophe which followed when they issued a flippant apology fronted by a shirtless photo of their awfully happy looking founder (indicating that this was the individual to blame).

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    29. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      My organization uses HostRocket. I've heard of people recommending BlueHost.

    30. Re:Who instead of Go Daddy? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      NameCheap. Switched a year or so ago. They're like under $10 and have given me no trouble. Their web interface also seems superior, and they support Dynamic DNS. Seems like you can't get quite as close to the actual text of the zone file. But they offer free DNS (completely free) so you can see if it meets your needs first.

  23. Pachyderm's Revenge by Penurious+Penguin · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it was this.

    --
    Forward! -- Emperor Norton, 2012
  24. Unorthodox business practices. DON'T DO BUSINESS! by yooy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    By chance GoDaddy holds one of my domain since several days for ransom. Expiration date is tomorrow and they wont release it and delaying, reviewing, delaying. Requesting me to write them from an email under the domain name, not realizing that I am already doing this and they actually answering me to an email under the exact domain name. I guess to force me to renew with them due to the expiration date is their goal. Well, they manged. I have to renew today and now I can't even do that. The review60 team at GoDaddy is a class of its own. Besides shooting elephants, half naked girls and SOPA support, they just show unorthodox, unprofessional, possibly illegal business practices. DO NOT DO BUSINESS WITH THEM! (The DOS attack is not their fault)

  25. Try namecheap.com or internet.bs insteat. woT by yooy · · Score: 2

    Try namecheap or internet.bs insteat. woT

  26. Re:Here's what you do. by MrLizard · · Score: 1

    Can I wave?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0n2vurSBIQ

    Anyway, my site (mrlizard.com) is hosted at GoDaddy and seems to still be up, so both my readers can rejoice.

  27. so much for the 99.999% uptime by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:_CgrkAqyinUJ:www.godaddy.com/domains/dns-hosting.aspx+&cd=4&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us

    1. Re:so much for the 99.999% uptime by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      They're way over that. Their yearly downtime would have to be 5 minutes or less according to Google

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    2. Re:so much for the 99.999% uptime by rs79 · · Score: 1

      Maybe for last year. Maybe for next year. But this year is not looking so good.

      --
      Need Mercedes parts ?
  28. Yes and yes. Conclusion? Move away ASAP! woT by yooy · · Score: 1

    Yes and yes. Conclusion? Move away ASAP! woT

  29. I use GoDaddy as a registrar only... by ilikenwf · · Score: 0

    Not for lack of desiring to go elsewhere, but I'm too lazy. I don't use their overpriced hosting and DNS. Instead, I use dreamhost for that stuff, and some AWS servers for the bigger sites...

    Godaddy isn't awful if you get coupon codes and don't do anything to draw undue attention to your domains. I have one that gets me 30-60% or something off on my renewals and new purchases.

  30. For shared hosting by tepples · · Score: 1

    My site is on Go Daddy shared web hosting. How does one use a third-party DNS in such an environment? I thought using a third-party DNS required at least that a site have its own dedicated IPv4 address, not the single IPv4 address shared among a thousand unrelated sites that is typical of name-based virtual hosting.

    1. Re:For shared hosting by gQuigs · · Score: 1

      Nope, not required at all. In most cases that "magic" (multiple hosts on one IP) is handled by Apache, which trusts whichever host you say you want.

    2. Re:For shared hosting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it doesn't matter what DNS you use, it still only resolves a hostname to an IP -- an A record is an A record!

      The webserver is responsible for reading the hostname in the HTTP request and returning the correct content (either by itself, or by proxying to the appropriate webserver).

    3. Re:For shared hosting by csnydermvpsoft · · Score: 1

      Name-based virtual hosting doesn't care at all who the DNS provider is. The browser resolves the IP address via DNS, then connects to the server and includes the desired hostname in the request header.

      Unless GoDaddy doesn't allow it for some reason, there's no reason that you can't use a different DNS provider, or even keep them as your primary but add a third-party secondary. Though I would be hesitant to stay with them for any services, regardless - they've already shown that their DNS infrastructure - which is arguably among the easiest services to make extremely fault-tolerant - was not able to handle this attack; I wouldn't have high hopes for their other infrastructure.

    4. Re:For shared hosting by tepples · · Score: 1

      Gandi handles the domain registration, but Go Daddy handles the DNS because that gives Go Daddy the ability to move my site to a different server if needed. If I were to use third-party DNS, I wouldn't know when Go Daddy has moved my site.

  31. Re:Unorthodox business practices. DON'T DO BUSINES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Pay them off, then dispute the charge. GoDaddy loses the money and gets docked the chargeback fee (up to $100)

  32. DDoS? by maitai · · Score: 1

    Honestly, it looks more like a routing issue to me. Our production servers can't reach Godaddy's DNS servers at all, but other computers in the same NOC (different IP blocks) have no issue. Our in office server and desktops (as well as my home server and computers) also have no issue with contacting Godaddy's DNS servers.

    I could be wrong of course. But I'm really only experiencing issues with contacting Godaddy's DNS servers from certain machines while others have no issue at all (can't get to their website from anywhere though).

    1. Re:DDoS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup, two copies of unbound, two different nets, one could see it the other couldn't.

      Cache flushes at either location didn't change it. Something very odd happened.

    2. Re:DDoS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it appears now that GoDaddy itself caused the outage by their own twisted fuck-up with DNS, and came up with the lame excuse to blame Anonymous for the problem that they caused. This deflects attention away from the true guilty parties and lets them blame a ficticious hacker for all of their troubles.

    3. Re:DDoS? by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      It looks like you may be right. At least that is what GoDaddy is saying now. http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2012/09/11/go-daddy-network-issues-not-hackers-or-ddos-caused-outage/

  33. Be Consistent by Crypto+Cavedweller · · Score: 0

    This will probably be the work of some guy who (quite rightly) opposes government interference with the free flow of information .... but has no qualms whatsoever impeding it themselves.

    1. Re:Be Consistent by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      Isn't that how leftists think? Do as I say, not as I do.

    2. Re:Be Consistent by ryanov · · Score: 1

      * Citation needed.

  34. "claim responsibility"? No, take credit by udachny · · Score: 1

    Saying that something that is even known as 'Anonymous' can 'claim responsibility' makes no sense.

    A group, like the IRA can claim responsibility. The Anonymous can try and take credit.

  35. WOOT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Danica Patrick, fossilized and covered in Farina!

  36. I think this will backfire. by Marble68 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So a bunch of non-profit groups I support are down thanks to these "activists".
    SOPA opposition, "ends justify the means even if it means f*cking over everyone with our scorched earth actions", and the "if you were stupid enough to be supporting our enemy then you are just collateral damage because we are so right we're justified in harming you to make a point" aside, I don't think it will win them many fans.

    --
    /me sips his coffee and ponders a new sig...
    1. Re:I think this will backfire. by gQuigs · · Score: 2

      If you are a non-profit paying GoDaddy for shared hosting, that's just a waste of money. Dreamhost has free shared hosting for 501(c)(3) non-profits http://wiki.dreamhost.com/Non-profit_Discount

      If you do want to sign up consider giving me some referral money (10%): http://www.dreamhost.com/r.cgi?1066796

    2. Re:I think this will backfire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are so many choices for domain registration and hosting, that anyone still using GoDaddy is effectively a supporter of SOPA. You can't claim to be innocent when it is so easy to stop supporting them.

    3. Re:I think this will backfire. by graphius · · Score: 1

      This pisses me off too, I have a friend who is a reseller so I bought some hosting from him (didn't know at the time it was godaddy) Now I have half a dozen domains and various websites and online tools. It would be a pain to move all of them.
      No love lost for anonymous

    4. Re:I think this will backfire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you are a non-profit paying GoDaddy, you are probably undermining your own mission statement as well. GoDaddy supports torture, they are anti-free speech, they collect and use biometrics on their employees, they issue 'mock-options'. If you're a non-profit, they're pretty much your enemy. (Unless you're one of those astroturf fake grass roots non-profits, paid for by the for-profits).

    5. Re:I think this will backfire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      then you are just collateral damage

      Let the corporations be collateral damage in the War Against Greed.

    6. Re:I think this will backfire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats great, except when the non profit you work for wants to have all those pretty tools website tools and templates that godaddy offers.

    7. Re:I think this will backfire. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Thats great, except when the non profit you work for wants to have all those pretty tools website tools and templates that godaddy offers.

      All the big webhosts have that kind of stuff. All of them. Cpanel, templates, automatic install of CMSes, although a lot only install Wordpress and maybe some kind of shopping cart.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    8. Re:I think this will backfire. by Marble68 · · Score: 1
      --
      /me sips his coffee and ponders a new sig...
  37. Slashdot predates 4chan by tepples · · Score: 2

    Anonymous the hacktivist collective appears to have originated from the 4chan imageboard, which began operation in 2003, and it really wasn't known by the name Anonymous until a Fox affiliate gave the group that name in mid-2007. Slashdot predates 4chan by several years.

    1. Re:Slashdot predates 4chan by ildon · · Score: 1

      Whooosh.

    2. Re:Slashdot predates 4chan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And 4chan is a copy of the Japanese image board 2ch (2 chan). 2ch >>>>>>>>> 4chan.

    3. Re:Slashdot predates 4chan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whos your daddy 4CHAN?, thats right.

    4. Re:Slashdot predates 4chan by tepples · · Score: 1

      Slashdot predates 2ch by 20 months.

  38. Re:Here's what you do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And if they haven't taken the necessary stops to make themselves almost completely anonymous, they deserve it anyway.

  39. today told client to use godaddy ... heh ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I moved all my business to bluehost for various non-tech reasons but a client has registered their domains through godaddy and is wildly overpaying for their webspace somewhere so I said "just get godaddy to handle it". so this is funny ... I guess I won't be navigating their convoluted menu system anytime in the next 24 - 48

  40. godaddy.com site by synapse7 · · Score: 1

    Seems to be up.

  41. probably godaddy's fault by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They just sucked shit and cratered. They are probably blaming anonymous to divert attention from how much they suck shit.

  42. Webhost suggestions? by Bonker · · Score: 1

    So back during the SOPA thing, I had a lot of real life matters going on that were somewhat more important than taking time to look for a new DNS and webhost. I contented myself with taking the ten minutes necessary for writing a nasty letter, got on with my pressing business, and SOPA died... for the time being.

    Now, I happen to have a few spare moments to dedicate to looking for a new webhost, and Anonymous or AnonymousOwner or whoever has done me a favor by reminding me that Godaddy is not necessarily my friend.

    Does anyone have any suggestions? I'd prefer somewhere that supports, or would let me install Ruby and Rails 3. Heroku seems to be the default Rails hangout, but frankly their pricing confuses the hell out of me.

    --
    The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
    1. Re:Webhost suggestions? by gQuigs · · Score: 1, Informative

      I'm on dreamhost and I really like the support, they usually get back to me quickly with a useful answer.

      Anyway, I know absolutely nothing about Rails, perhaps this will help:
      http://wiki.dreamhost.com/Ruby_on_Rails#Rails_3

      Referral link (10%): http://www.dreamhost.com/r.cgi?1066796 [dreamhost.com]. The pricing is simple ($9.95 standard for 1 year term, -$1 per month for each year longer), and you can definitely find a better deal for the first year on dreamhost (but it's promotional first year).

    2. Re:Webhost suggestions? by jason777 · · Score: 2

      I believe everybody here is going to namecheap. I haven't switched mine yet because I'm using google apps and have to transfer all those settings. But due to this incident, I'm switching it as soon as godaddy is back up.

    3. Re:Webhost suggestions? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      It's way less annoying than it seems like it's going to be.

  43. Re:Here's what you do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Guess you need to clear your local dns-cache. You go do that and check again.

  44. Re:Go, Daddy, Go ! Go ! Go ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice of you to tell us that you are stupid. When you say things like how you harbor "hate + infinity" for a company it outs you as a total dilhole. What would you harbor for someone who broke into your house and stole all your stuff? Would that be "hate + infinity + 1"? Or maybe "hate them to infinity and beyond!". Perhaps from Hell's heart you spit at them? Do they task you?

    Get a clue. You probably have a mild dislike for their policies.

  45. The first thing they said was by houghi · · Score: 1

    who's your Daddy now?

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  46. Competitor Specials? by noc007 · · Score: 1

    I wonder if GoDaddy's competitors will have domain transfer specials like they did during the SOPA shenanigans.

    1. Re:Competitor Specials? by noc007 · · Score: 1

      Apparently the coupon code BYEBYEGD is still valid at NameCheap. The only thing I liked about GoDaddy was I usually could find a coupon code that knocked the renewal down to $6-$7/domain/yr. I don't see a lot of coupons for NameCheap that would benefit someone renewing with them.

      I guess this is a lesson in you get what you pay for.

  47. obligatory.. by LodCrappo · · Score: 1

    and nothing of value was lost

    --
    -Lod
  48. To those who say it is up by notdotcom.com · · Score: 1

    Godaddy is down to me. I'm currently using public WiFi, so I can't speak about their infrastructure, but "Error 137 (net::ERR_NAME_RESOLUTION_FAILED): Unknown Error" seems to sum it up.

    --
    Grandpa: My Homer is not a communist. He may be a liar, a pig, an idiot, a communist, but he is not a porn star.
  49. For all the dudes who're crying about by orodos · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Losing business, etc. Sucks, but there's a trade-off when you decide to conduct business on the internet. Who cares whodunit, hacking is a part of e-culture. The internet is free, and there are some rad dudes out there expressing their freedom - just like you. You have some pretty unrealistic expectations if you expect 100% uptime. Honestly, life would be pretty boring if everything just worked like 'it should.'

    1. Re:For all the dudes who're crying about by stevenfuzz · · Score: 1

      So, if a hacker took it upon themselves to get into your personal computer and steal it, maybe even destroy your hardware... would you be like... hey, I mean hackers, what are you going to do. I guess I can't be mad....

  50. Nope. by yooy · · Score: 1

    Only the frontpage. You can't actually log in.

  51. Good for business? by sjbe · · Score: 1, Informative

    They supported legislation which was purported to be good for business. In the end once they knew the details of the bill, they pulled their support.

    Let's assume that what you say is true. That means they supported legislation that they did not understand which means they are stupid. Now lets assume they knew full well what was in the bill. That means they are, for lack of a better term, evil. So either they are stupid or they are evil or possibly both. Given the fact that GoDaddy is quite large enough to hire expensive lawyers and lobbyists capable of explaining the bill to them, I rather doubt that they did not know (or at least should have known) the contents of the bill prior to supporting or opposing it publicly. Given my experiences with GoDaddy I tend to favor that they are both stupid and evil but that's just my opinion. Lot's of things are purported to be "good for business". This doesn't make them all good ideas.

  52. Zombie Apocalypse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could it be?!? zombie apocalypse?!!!!!!

  53. Portal.MicrosoftOnline.com Also Down Today by glenmark · · Score: 1

    I have no idea if there is any connection, though.....

    --
    *** Quantum Mechanics: The Dreams of Which Stuff is Made ***
  54. IP is resolving, but nothing is passing through by jayconverse · · Score: 1

    My company's Exchange server's correct IP is resolving, and I can use OWA to send mail to internal recipients, but nothing sent to mail.{mycompany}.com is arriving.

  55. Lost a Supporter for their cause by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My business is hosted on GoDaddy - I needed something quick and simple to maintain while I set up my business. I pay for hosting services. And, now some jerkwad thinks it's okay to take down my site and many others.

    Anonymous once had my support for their stance. The are now costing ME money. They have lost my support.

    1. Re:Lost a Supporter for their cause by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whaaaaaa your business wasn't important enough to do any research and buy hosting from a reputable company and now you just can't believe the cheapest scumbag hosting company on the planet has let you down.

      seriously? if you bought the cheapest apartment available in the worst section of town, would you really be that surprised if a break in happened now and then?

  56. Re:Someone should email you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to let you know that the Tag Line is not part of the Comment....

  57. So, Domain-Grabbing-Company #1 has gone down? by someones · · Score: 1

    YAY, Domain-Grabbing-Company #1 has gone down!

    They got what they deserved.

    I would have preffered another way like making domaingrabbing illegal all over the world and then suing them to hell.
    Anon did it faster, but that wont be a long-term solution - what a pity.

  58. Re:Here's what you do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you now how DNS propogation works?

  59. I'm a big fan of all the posters... by stevenfuzz · · Score: 1

    Saying stuff like "GoDaddy is terrible, change providers if your Go Daddy site is down, don't bitch about it". Really? Are you serious? So, because in your opinion GoDaddy "sucks", this means it is ok that paying customers are losing service because of hackers? FU. Seriously. I don't have anything on GoDaddy, but I sure hope hackers take down the sites owned by anyone that things they are better than godaddy users.

    1. Re:I'm a big fan of all the posters... by bobbutts · · Score: 1

      They are technically and politically inferior and they use sleazy sales tactics. It's an ignorant choice to use them exclusively for dns or any critical service and expect perfect uptime.

    2. Re:I'm a big fan of all the posters... by MechaStreisand · · Score: 1

      People who use GoDaddy funded SOPA and fund all of GoDaddy's evil lobbying efforts. People who use GoDaddy deserve all the shit they get.

      --
      Disclaimer: IANAL. This post is, however, legal advice, and creates an attorney-client relationship.
    3. Re:I'm a big fan of all the posters... by stevenfuzz · · Score: 1

      Yes, and if you drink coke, I hope you get the plague. Watch ABC. Wear Nikes? You should have your feet cut off. ESPN. NFL. Sony. US Olympic Committee. Please. Wishing suffering on those who do not share your believes makes you a terrorist.

    4. Re:I'm a big fan of all the posters... by MechaStreisand · · Score: 1
      Are you retarded? GoDaddy is 1) easy to avoid - nobody needs it, and anyone can choose another registrar or host. There are companies that are impossible to avoid, but GoDaddy isn't one of them. 2) GoDaddy is a high-profile supporter of SOPA: everyone knows that they lobbied for it (although some people are deluded enough to think that they stopped - they didn't). So everyone should know that they are evil and stop supporting them. If they don't, tough. You get what you deserve.

      Wishing suffering on those who do not share your believes (sic) makes you a terrorist.

      You're the one who said "I hope you get the plague," "You should have your feet cut off." and you're calling me a terrorist, you SOPA-supporting waste of skin? Go kill yourself.

      --
      Disclaimer: IANAL. This post is, however, legal advice, and creates an attorney-client relationship.
  60. Don't forget to disable PPC ads by AlienSexist · · Score: 1

    If you are affected by this DDoS you might as well disable any PPC ads you have with Google, etc. No sense in spending money to drive traffic to your site if it is unreachable.

  61. Looks like it's the Name Servers by patchouly · · Score: 1

    It's more than sites that are simply hosted by GoDaddy. I host my own site on my own server and only use Godaddy's name servers. My site show up fine in Canada and in parts of the U.S., but to the rest of the U.S., it is gone.

    1. Re:Looks like it's the Name Servers by ryanov · · Score: 1

      NameCheap offer free DNS hosting.

  62. The Godaddy business model by bobbutts · · Score: 2

    Their plan is to advertise the most, so every idiot who decides to create a site on a whim chooses them. Complete the deal with insanely cheap promotional pricing. Then count on them being unwilling to face the technical challenge of switching to a reasonably priced host before their plan recurs at a heavily inflated price.

    1. Re:The Godaddy business model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their plan is to advertise the most, so every idiot who decides to create a site on a whim chooses them. Complete the deal with insanely cheap promotional pricing. Then count on them being unwilling to face the technical challenge of switching to a reasonably priced host before their plan recurs at a heavily inflated price.

      Most of the time that "technical challenge" amounts to screaming at some middle manager until they finally give up and unlock your domain so it can transfer.

  63. Re:Here's what you do. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can I wave?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0n2vurSBIQ

    Anyway, my site (mrlizard.com) is hosted at GoDaddy and seems to still be up, so both my readers can rejoice.

    Wrong mrlizard.com is down for the count!

  64. Not surprising by JohnVanVliet · · Score: 1

    It is not all that surprising
    When all is said and done, I am betting that Go Daddy's LIKE for EOL fedora versions will have had a LARGE part

    Go daddy likes fedora
    they are ( were now) running
    Fedora 1
    Fedora 2
    Fedora 3
    Fedora 4
    Fedora 5
    Fedora 6
    Fedora 7
    Fedora 8
    servers that they have KNOWING and WILLFULLY NOT patched or upgraded

    and they are having users run commerce on OS's with KNOWN HOLES
    The Linux help forums are always getting questions on HELP with a 6 to 14 version out of date fedora install

    --
    "I don't pitch OpenSUSE Linux to my friends, i let Microsoft do it for me
  65. Re:Verisign FTW? by druiid · · Score: 1

    Sorry.... uhh... I didn't notice I wasn't logged in. This was me.

  66. Maybe it is regional by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When this story posted I went to a couple of friends' websites, all of which use GoDaddy for DNS. Their sites were all resolving. I also went to the GoDaddy website itself and go on without any delay. Perhaps the attack/outage was a regional issue? It certainly hasn't caused any problems for anyone I know who uses their services and it hasn't stopped their main website from displaying.

  67. Glad to see them getting what they deserve by mimicoctopus · · Score: 2

    I used to be a GoDaddy customer until I got "fined" by them for some made-up claim of spamming. They said they'd take away all of my domains if I didn't give them $199 and I didn't have the resources to fight-back so I just gave them the money and then left their service shortly thereafter. Apparently, a lot of people have had the same issue. There was a whole thing about it on NoDaddy, but they eventually took that down somehow.

  68. Re:Verisign FTW? by druiid · · Score: 1

    Actually, can someone just delete this entire comment tree and post for me? I'll flag it. Sorry!!

  69. ASSumptions running rampant by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1

    A massive DDOS attack?

    Anonymous claims what?

    I think what we currently know is closer to NOTHING than rampant speculation might have one believe.

    1. Re:ASSumptions running rampant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did they know it was a DDoS attack and not a DoS attack?

    2. Re:ASSumptions running rampant by crutchy · · Score: 1

      because nobody uses dos anymore

    3. Re:ASSumptions running rampant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GoDaddy's hosting servers are mostly running DOS, that's why their service is so unreliable.

  70. Verisign Wins? by druiid · · Score: 1

    I'm assuming they're adding the Verisign DDoS protection service, but this change should make EVERY single Godaddy client very, very, very nervous (from the current whois):

                Domain Name: GODADDY.COM
                Registrar: GODADDY.COM, LLC
                Whois Server: whois.godaddy.com
                Referral URL: http://registrar.godaddy.com
                Name Server: A1.VERISIGNDNS.COM
                Name Server: A2.VERISIGNDNS.COM
                Name Server: A3.VERISIGNDNS.COM
                Status: clientDeleteProhibited
                Status: clientRenewProhibited
                Status: clientTransferProhibited
                Status: clientUpdateProhibited
                Updated Date: 10-sep-2012
                Creation Date: 02-mar-1999
                Expiration Date: 01-nov-2021

    Yes, you read that right... they just implemented verisign name-servers. A multi-multi million (billion?) dollar company.

    And in case anyone doesn't believe this:

    > server a1.verisigndns.com
    Default server: a1.verisigndns.com
    Address: 209.112.113.33#53
    Default server: a1.verisigndns.com
    Address: 2001:500:7967::2:33#53
    > www.godaddy.com
    Server: a1.verisigndns.com
    Address: 209.112.113.33#53

    Name: www.godaddy.com
    Address: 184.168.227.107

  71. "Godaddy goes down, on Danica Patrick" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then they find out she has a penis and get even more excited, except for the one spy from 1and1.

  72. DNS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A requester only needs to talk to one of the DNS Servers, so no matter how many you have, as long as one is reachable, the upstream will get the DNS records. Most businesses (of appropriate size) put in 2 or 3 in different locations and will do round-robin and other load balancing on them as well. With a few virtual machines (say Amazon and Google(?? not sure you get a virtual machine though)) even a small business could have multiple, geographically distributed DNS on the cheap (assuming experience in house; but, truthfully, DNS is not that complicated for most businesses).

    As for updating them, if you control the virtual machine running the DNS daemon you can just do a ssh file transfer (scp) to move files (manual, but if you don't change your DNS often, quite acceptable) or use automatic file syncing to keep them all up to date with each other.

       

  73. High-Horses All Over This Place by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yea, yea. You knew GoDaddy sucked all along and you already switched away from GoDaddy and blah blah blah.

    There's a herd of high-horses running all over this Slashdot thread and every one of those horses is full of shit. Are any of you actually naive or stupid enough to actually believe that this could not happen to ANY and every registrar/hosting provider? Are you stupid enough to think that self hosting your DNS or website would be a better option?

    Any and all major registrars/hosting providers are susceptible to this type of thing. All of them. And moving to smaller providers just opens you up to a whole web of other potential issues.

    Climb down off your high-horse before you fall off and hurt yourselves.

  74. Previous IP addresses by disago · · Score: 1

    If someone wants to access Godaddy's service to change the NS of their domains just setup the hosts file with the following info:

    97.74.104.201 www.godaddy.com
    97.74.104.201 godaddy.com
    216.69.149.48 affiliate.godaddy.com
    216.69.149.90 idp.godaddy.com
    216.69.149.215 mysq.godaddy.com
    216.69.149.53 dns.godaddy.com
    216.69.149.9 dcc.godaddy.com

    AWS Route 53 will be a good bet for your next DNS hosting.

    1. Re:Previous IP addresses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice phishing.

      Funny thing with hosts files. Any moron can put in anything he likes and direct you wherever he wishes. So much for added security, lol.

      Right, APK asshole? Debunk that. Noone can trust a hosts file by a raving lunatic. DNS is the only reliable source.

  75. Secondary DNS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and just what would prevent you hosting secondary or tertiary DNS on other servers

    i guess intelligence .....of which you have none regarding IT.
    you deserve this lesson in how the DNS system can be made so rundant that this attack is useless but your cost in your capitalistic world is too high oh sucks to be you

  76. A solution to change name server to working ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In-case you want to change the nameserver to a working third party one just add the following three lines in your hosts file to be able to log into godaddy

    216.69.149.90 idp.godaddy.com
    216.69.149.215 mya.godaddy.com
    216.69.149.9 dcc.godaddy.com

    Mazen bamasoud

  77. Re:Someone should email you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Touché

  78. They cant hide forever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Members of anonymous cant hide forever, eventually they ll make a mistake, they always do, and i hope the sentence will be harsh, very harsh.

  79. Libel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anonymous or someone claiming to be them said they collected the UDID from an FBI laptop an Appstore user admitted came from them. The other claims of having more UDID's and associated private data they simply didn't publish also seems false. It makes sense Anonymous does not have the capacity for a widespread godaddy webhosting down time. This is a Godaddy issue only.

    Since Anonymous does not typically use lies as a tool, this indicates to me someone is spoofing and discrediting Anonymous, probably as a periferal attack on what's his name in the embassy in London.

    This is FEDGOV fixation at its best.

    JJ

    1. Re:Libel by lpq · · Score: 1

      The user from Arizona had a 98% match.

      for gathering the same data from the same source it wouldn't be impossible to get a 100% match and have the data sources come from two different groups/sources.

      It's like the probability of having 2 people with the same birthday in a 30 person class room being remarkably likely...

      In this case they are focusing data collection on some single-group of people, that the data they collect comes up similar is statistically expected.

  80. Would cacheing help? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This isn't an issue I've studied much; but would cacheing help DNS? I'm not saying "pull from the cache all the time". I'm saying, "if the host can't contact the DNS server or get a timely resolution, hit the cache". It's not like people change IPs every day.

  81. Obligatory Car Analogy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, if a hacker took it upon themselves to get into your personal computer and steal it, maybe even destroy your hardware... would you be like... hey, I mean hackers, what are you going to do. I guess I can't be mad....

    No. You're analogy is more akin to someone breaking into your car.

    The OP was meaning that the internet(the Information Super Highway) is like an open road. There's a lot that can happen on the open road and you shouldn't expect to be able to get from here to there 100% of the time. There are going to be traffic jams, wrecks, closures for construction, bridges washed out, and yes, even assholes purposely tearing up the road. So, you should enjoy it when it is an open road, but you shouldn't bet your life or your livelihood on it always being open.

    Today, an asshole tore up the road. It's not the end of the world. And if it is the end of your business, let's just say that your business was already well on its way out.

    Captcha says: Incident - How does it know?

  82. It's David Miscavige posing as Anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Using up the the money he's sucked from Church of Scientology members to prevent donors from paying Marc Headley's court costs through his GoDaddy hosted site.

  83. Re:Here's what you do. by MrLizard · · Score: 1

    Vaguely. I used to know/care a lot more than I do now. It was up when I wrote that, then down a bit later, now up again. It's worrisome. The loss of even one reader represents about a 50% drop in my traffic!

  84. Advert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm, will the Danica Patrick car replace the Godaddy logo with "try again later"?

  85. Cyber attack from Iran? by taxman_10m · · Score: 1

    I have trouble buying the tweet claiming credit. Retaliation for Stuxnet?

  86. Thanks Anon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Any support that I had for anonymous is no longer. Great, you took down godaddy, in the process you took down thousands (if not more) web sites which have nothing to do with godaddy.

    Thanks for nothing!

  87. don't participate in the DDOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obviously most people are going to run out and hit godaddy.com after they read this. Don't be a dupe.

  88. forever by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    freedom is not something you fight for once and then retire. it requires constant maintenance, generation after generation. there's always some angle some asshole is trying to work, where they benefit and everyone else loses. people don't really get that

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:forever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So then, if you're fighting all the time, where's the freedom? That's stupid. Freedom includes the freedom to relax.

  89. Anonymous, need you on a different front. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Come on Anonymous, there are thousands of top secret patents at the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). Energy companies keeping environment-changing technologies a secret. Military keeping world-changing advanced propulsion technologies a secret. Use your power to help mankind!

  90. Kill them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Any body who knowingly participates in anonymous should be tortured and killed with no due process... just for the Lulz

    Anarchists deserve anarchy... put 'em down like the cockroaches they are and wipe-out anybody who supports them. It's a shame to use innocent monkeys for medical experiments when there are members of anonymous on the loose.

    This has nothing to do with GoDaddy or any other particular target of their self-absorbed teenage rage; A civilization is under no obligation to be civil to people who do not, by definition, subscribe to the rules of that civilization. To continue to allow this asymmetrical warfare to continue against innocent law-abiding citizens is just plain dumb. The organizers of anonymous should be tied to a stake and set on fire; any script kiddies in mommy's basement who help wage their attacks on society should join them on the pyre. We are under no obligation to tolerate this crap.

    1. Re:Kill them by crutchy · · Score: 1

      You have obviously never read Sun Tzu's "The Art of War", because "Anonymous" is actually waging the most perfectly civilized war possible... zero death toll.

      If anything you should be streaming abuse at the incompetent politicians of the world who send thousands of sons and fathers to their pointless deaths, and the greedy business leaders who pilfer billions of dollars of the hard earned living of the working middle class.

      You are right that it has nothing to do with GoDaddy... but GoDaddy is pathetic example of a model corporate citizen, and by targeting GoDaddy, Anonymous is sending a message to others like it that there is nowhere to hide.

  91. Re:Verisign FTW? by Kalriath · · Score: 1

    No, this is Slashdot. Slashdot does not allow you to cover up your mistakes. There is no edit, and there is no delete. Your mistakes are immortalised in digital stone. Unless you post copyrighted Church of Scientology materials.

    And did you consider that they changed their DNS so that their site comes back up? Presumably so they can post status messages, etc. It's considered good practice for hosts to have their own DNS physically isolated from their own network so that when stuff goes down, they can still let people know.

    --
    For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
  92. Not Anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The script kiddie who did this may well claim to be a member of Anonymous, but he's doing this totally on his own. Therefore the Anonymous link is a complete red herring.

  93. Because of GoDaddy's lack or security practices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So yes, by picking GoDaddy you set yourself in a time bomb.

  94. godaddy = kiddy pr0n? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    think so

  95. Re:AnonymousOwn3r - cavity search at 11 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Flamebait, wow the Slashdot mods have hit a new low. Apparently people here aren't actually in charge of running any websites/companies anymore.

  96. Re:Unorthodox business practices. DON'T DO BUSINES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do the above, and also take them to small claims court. When they don't show up, you'll at least get some money for your trouble.

  97. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That worked for AOL. I know people who were unable to switch for more than a decade.

  98. Advice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As someone who registered with godaddy because I was having trouble finding another website that offered ".it" domains, my website has been up this whole time. I however would like to switch, but I'm wondering if there is any potential risk(s)/added complication(s) when transferring an Italian domain. Am I being dumb? I would appreciate any advice/information about this and where to switch. Thank you guys.

  99. Please see my reply to gQuigs by tepples · · Score: 1

    Unless GoDaddy doesn't allow it for some reason, there's no reason that you can't use a different DNS provider

    To do so, I'd first need to know my site's IP address, and I don't for the reason I described in my reply to gQuigs.

  100. Are you 12? by DaKong · · Score: 1

    Oh. I see. So, when the Bridgestone tires I bought fail catastrophically, then you would jump up and point your finger at me, saying, "Aha! See?! You ought to have done your research on the expansion coefficient of steel-belted radials *before* you bought those tires. Well, I did, because I'm a know-it-all Poindexter, so I. have. no. sympathy. for. you."

    OK. In the real world, in technical fields you have to run 24/7/365 just to stay even with the people in *your* field. You don't have time to micro-manage every step of the chain between what you do and the end market (whatever that is). So saying that, gasp, a cancer researcher might have not fully vetted a mere domain registrar like GoDaddy before paying for their services and therefore it's his fault is puerile at best.

    --
    If not us, who? If not now, when?
    1. Re:Are you 12? by LodCrappo · · Score: 1

      Hmm.. while you seem to have missed the point entirely, you do help to make mine.

      Of course, exactly as you say, a cancer researcher can not be expected to make sound technical decisions. I would never suggest that they could or should.
      The problem in the OP's scenario is not that he make a *bad* technical decision. The problem is clearly that he made a technical decision at all. As you and he and I all seem to agree, he is not qualified to do so.

      The fact that more care is not being taken by those managing something as potentially important as a cancer research project demonstrates irresponsibility at best. One would hope that those who do such work would not let something that is so simple to fix become an obstacle when expert assistance is so readily available.

      Would I blame someone if they bought a set of tires from a reputable company and had an unexpected issue? Of course not. Would I blame them if instead they went out, bought the cheapest tires they could find and then installed the things themselves? Yes.

      --
      -Lod
    2. Re:Are you 12? by ryanov · · Score: 1

      No, but if after all of the hoopla went public, you didn't check to see if you might have those tires and you still underinflate your tires today, yes.

  101. Flawed logic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FEMA and many other agencies probably have the right and the means to shut down the whole phone system, cell and fixed.

    Does that mean a bunch of hooligans can claim kudos for deliberately doing the same without any rhyme or reason?,br/>
    Call them what they are: Anonymous Cowards (and, yes, I do see the irony...) on a morally flawed and dubious mission to attack things that they think (whoever "they" actually turn out to be) deserve attacking. Is it any different from Nazi stormtroopers, except for the target of their zeal. They're a bunch of fucking morons, but dangerous morons who should be stopped because who is to know where they will point their moral anger next?

  102. I have never killed a man by Vegemeister · · Score: 1

    I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure.

  103. Goodbye Godaddy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yesterday sucked for me! Well most of the day. Luckily I had a few of my sites hosted here: http://budurl.com/qfpn

  104. GOOD ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I support the anonymous group they always have valid reasons for doing stuff so props !!

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3FVO1u09-o