while:;do for IP in `cat/var/log/httpd/access_log|awk '{print $2}'`; do/usr/sbin/iptables -t filter -A INPUT -p tcp -s $IP/32 -j DROP;done;done or something like that. Yeah. I got your AI right here. I can sell you a tarball with a digitally signed dignature- I'm quite digil when it comes to being a digilante.
It was supposed to be a sequel. There's a director's cut that's literally that- a cut- that removes all references to the planet Zeist and the firey outer regions of the Planet McLeod, home to the race of cybernetic warbots hell-bent on the destruction of the Earth and its ozone protecting neutron generator built by Connor McCleod of the Clan McLeod, who fights when he is challenged, using the ultimate gift- that once he finally cut off the heads of every french opera singer, he would be blessed with every failed business model from the.com bust- enough to mastermind a giant glowing tachyon field array that protected the earth from the ozone layer that the Earth traded to the planet Zeist earlier in exchange for the raising of Atlantis. Hey, didnt Connor get his head chopped off in the 4th movie and his pseudo brother Doooonk'n had to be vigil, and did climatic fury ensue?
ISPs can have only a small percentage of their users online because this is how they make a profit. In such a cut-throat competition for users, you can be assured that the going rate for a dialup is as close to just-barely-enough profit-wise as you can get. If your ISP has an 8:1 modem:user ratio, you can figure your average dialup port costs them a little less than 160 bucks a month, including paying the tech support and accounting departments, infrastructure, and maybe, if you're lucky, enough to save up for an upgrade every few years. Expect similar profits in the DSL and cable modem markets. Look at history. Radios. Televisions. Interactive Internet. Each time we make a new medium more complex, the generation before it is 10 times more reliable than whatever you are using currently. When the Internet cannot tell 6 billion people about a crisis, it's hardly laughable that a 2 dollar plastic radio has no problems relaying the news. If getting rid of these "strict rules" (i.e. resource limits) is of universal importance, then people must pay a magnitude more for their access, universally. (Or wait til the next generation of internetworking develops, at which point the current stuff will be ubercheap)
Someday I'm sure there will be some default Samba using SWAT configuration that "just makes things easier" by doing a little "Administrator=root" alias (you can already do this). Someone will make yet another virus that respawns itself, and in the firewall deactivation, it'll have some clever SMB discovery tool with a list of default vendor configs, and that coupled with some obscure linux kernel bug, well... I just don't feel like it's TOO far a stretch that someone could take down a linux firewall protecting your LAN. The way I see it, if it's exploitable, accessable, and has a default configuration, you can make a virus that'll have a chance at hacking it. *shrug* A bit of a stretch but the point is to say merely "you never know".
You do realize that this is probably classed as terrorism right?
Nah, waiting $RANDOM seconds between hits leaves us with a non organized attack- what if I use one of those glass birds full of Freon 11 that keep bobbing up and down for the water to click my reload button- are they going to lock me up, the glass bird, or the keyboard for "being in the wrong place at the wrong time?" Cause I can say that I don't know the bird, but all he's got is the right to remain silent.
A Freedom Fighter would do this in bash:
wh1le:;do wget http://some.site>/dev/null;d0ne
if the web server is worth its salt, it'll stop listening to you after like 4 seconds.
Well, I think it's neat. I would pay up to 300 dollars for the controller unit, and 85 dollars per lift, if it can do 4 couches total (16 lifts). And I would buy 4, not 16. But my living room is in a better setup than theirs. I think I even have a jpeg... *looks* oh look at that, yes i do. http://digitalsushi.com/konton/livingroom/ You know whats funny is that I am not an audiophile. If you swapped those crap Bose 301s and Boston whatevers (a further tribute that I dont know what models they are) with some 20k dollar rig, I wouldnt even notice. Anyhoo, I figured I'd post that link since it was already there. I like seeing other people's personal LAN/office setups, and living room setups. It's too bad I dont have a camera that can get the wide tight shot that is my LAN, cause its cooler than my living room- I never spend time in there. Maybe thats why I've been here 4 months and the nintendo is still unplugged. Thing that ticks me off is that I get a 99/100 signal rating to DirectTV, and I average about 20 minutes of television daily (so like 2 or 3 shows a week)- DirectTV made me sign a one year contract where I can't bust out. Lame huh. Sorry for the wild rambling- hey anyone else have pics of their setups? (the theme of mine is that I have the coolest speaker stand on slashdot (little lights on a dimmer run under all the cloth- it diffuses!) and that I have no idea what my equipment is.. heck I dont even have a sub in that room!)
cool stuff, i think this is a good cause. i've set it up on three machines, and at least another three tonight when i get home from work! i like this kind of thing- they get something that will possibly benefit me when i'm old, and in return i get an excellent representation of how fast my machines are!
Interesting fun fact- almost 45% of you grabbing my mirror are using Windows:D (pssst. you can download from the lunix now, you don't have to download it with the Blue E and then WSFTP it up)
being a good samaritan. no www prefix so browsers won't auto link it, no http prefix for same reason. please do not convert to hyperlink. digitalsushi.com/chkrootkit.tar.gz will leave up for 24 hours, or when i just cant take the abuse anymore.
the worst part about being a sysadmin is, opposite a sales guy, the less attention you get, the better you are. i don't ever recall a week where someone slapped me on the back and said "good job, nothing happened today!" no one remembers us:-D we're the digital shadows. and why pay for something you dont apparently use?
you're absolutely right. some of us implement this with procmail and various other filters already. it works 100% of the time. it is the future. now i'm going to spoil it. we'll all spend more time on keeping the white lists current than deleting spam.
Nope, it's just an uncanny coincidence both in physical attributes and URL/file naming irony. Go figure! I'm going back downstairs into my secret lab, be back in a few weeks *peace*
As you can see, I am not impressed. When something that people just havent noticed over years and years becomes news of the day, it's evident that people are just a bit too egocentrical to notice anything outside of their own little worlds. Sheesh. Hidden antennas.
doh stupid html nm
blast foiled
awk '{print $2}'/var/log/httpd/access_log
your kung fu is better than mine, the\ way,\ what're-senpai
it'd be like...
:;do for IP in `cat /var/log/httpd/access_log|awk '{print $2}'`; do /usr/sbin/iptables -t filter -A INPUT -p tcp -s $IP/32 -j DROP;done;done or something like that. Yeah. I got your AI right here. I can sell you a tarball with a digitally signed dignature- I'm quite digil when it comes to being a digilante.
while
It was supposed to be a sequel. There's a director's cut that's literally that- a cut- that removes all references to the planet Zeist and the firey outer regions of the Planet McLeod, home to the race of cybernetic warbots hell-bent on the destruction of the Earth and its ozone protecting neutron generator built by Connor McCleod of the Clan McLeod, who fights when he is challenged, using the ultimate gift- that once he finally cut off the heads of every french opera singer, he would be blessed with every failed business model from the .com bust- enough to mastermind a giant glowing tachyon field array that protected the earth from the ozone layer that the Earth traded to the planet Zeist earlier in exchange for the raising of Atlantis. Hey, didnt Connor get his head chopped off in the 4th movie and his pseudo brother Doooonk'n had to be vigil, and did climatic fury ensue?
Confucious say gamer man who die flushing one down need 1-up
Cause that info isnt being passed to your phone.
Never say never!
I think this is how 99.9% of arguments between engineers and pure mathematicians start. I mean 100% of arguments.
ISPs can have only a small percentage of their users online because this is how they make a profit. In such a cut-throat competition for users, you can be assured that the going rate for a dialup is as close to just-barely-enough profit-wise as you can get. If your ISP has an 8:1 modem:user ratio, you can figure your average dialup port costs them a little less than 160 bucks a month, including paying the tech support and accounting departments, infrastructure, and maybe, if you're lucky, enough to save up for an upgrade every few years. Expect similar profits in the DSL and cable modem markets. Look at history. Radios. Televisions. Interactive Internet. Each time we make a new medium more complex, the generation before it is 10 times more reliable than whatever you are using currently. When the Internet cannot tell 6 billion people about a crisis, it's hardly laughable that a 2 dollar plastic radio has no problems relaying the news. If getting rid of these "strict rules" (i.e. resource limits) is of universal importance, then people must pay a magnitude more for their access, universally. (Or wait til the next generation of internetworking develops, at which point the current stuff will be ubercheap)
Whuh? Palm.BugBear?! Did you wash your hands?!
but would one of them pay for a similar one on ebay?
Someday I'm sure there will be some default Samba using SWAT configuration that "just makes things easier" by doing a little "Administrator=root" alias (you can already do this). Someone will make yet another virus that respawns itself, and in the firewall deactivation, it'll have some clever SMB discovery tool with a list of default vendor configs, and that coupled with some obscure linux kernel bug, well... I just don't feel like it's TOO far a stretch that someone could take down a linux firewall protecting your LAN. The way I see it, if it's exploitable, accessable, and has a default configuration, you can make a virus that'll have a chance at hacking it. *shrug* A bit of a stretch but the point is to say merely "you never know".
Nah, waiting $RANDOM seconds between hits leaves us with a non organized attack- what if I use one of those glass birds full of Freon 11 that keep bobbing up and down for the water to click my reload button- are they going to lock me up, the glass bird, or the keyboard for "being in the wrong place at the wrong time?" Cause I can say that I don't know the bird, but all he's got is the right to remain silent.
A Freedom Fighter would do this in bash:
wh1le:;do wget http://some.site>/dev/null;d0ne
if the web server is worth its salt, it'll stop listening to you after like 4 seconds.
a giant round thing on a stick
"Me fail english? That's unpossible!" -Ralph Wiggum
Well, I think it's neat. I would pay up to 300 dollars for the controller unit, and 85 dollars per lift, if it can do 4 couches total (16 lifts). And I would buy 4, not 16. But my living room is in a better setup than theirs. I think I even have a jpeg... *looks* oh look at that, yes i do. http://digitalsushi.com/konton/livingroom/ You know whats funny is that I am not an audiophile. If you swapped those crap Bose 301s and Boston whatevers (a further tribute that I dont know what models they are) with some 20k dollar rig, I wouldnt even notice. Anyhoo, I figured I'd post that link since it was already there. I like seeing other people's personal LAN/office setups, and living room setups. It's too bad I dont have a camera that can get the wide tight shot that is my LAN, cause its cooler than my living room- I never spend time in there. Maybe thats why I've been here 4 months and the nintendo is still unplugged. Thing that ticks me off is that I get a 99/100 signal rating to DirectTV, and I average about 20 minutes of television daily (so like 2 or 3 shows a week)- DirectTV made me sign a one year contract where I can't bust out. Lame huh. Sorry for the wild rambling- hey anyone else have pics of their setups? (the theme of mine is that I have the coolest speaker stand on slashdot (little lights on a dimmer run under all the cloth- it diffuses!) and that I have no idea what my equipment is.. heck I dont even have a sub in that room!)
cool stuff, i think this is a good cause. i've set it up on three machines, and at least another three tonight when i get home from work! i like this kind of thing- they get something that will possibly benefit me when i'm old, and in return i get an excellent representation of how fast my machines are!
Engineer-in-a-Box 2.0
So now am I back to thinking inside of the box?
What do you think?
I dont think! I bet Engineer-in-a-Box 2.0 could tell me though!
NOTE TO SELF: actually run vulnerability checker programs before posting mirrors to them on a public link to your own web server
Interesting fun fact- almost 45% of you grabbing my mirror are using Windows :D (pssst. you can download from the lunix now, you don't have to download it with the Blue E and then WSFTP it up)
being a good samaritan. no www prefix so browsers won't auto link it, no http prefix for same reason. please do not convert to hyperlink. digitalsushi.com/chkrootkit.tar.gz will leave up for 24 hours, or when i just cant take the abuse anymore.
the worst part about being a sysadmin is, opposite a sales guy, the less attention you get, the better you are. i don't ever recall a week where someone slapped me on the back and said "good job, nothing happened today!" no one remembers us :-D we're the digital shadows. and why pay for something you dont apparently use?
you're absolutely right. some of us implement this with procmail and various other filters already. it works 100% of the time. it is the future. now i'm going to spoil it. we'll all spend more time on keeping the white lists current than deleting spam.
Nope, it's just an uncanny coincidence both in physical attributes and URL/file naming irony. Go figure! I'm going back downstairs into my secret lab, be back in a few weeks *peace*
Tree we did up in Philly
a clock tower- the hands are the antenna
ooh, ooh... that aint what you think it is are we good or what?
this was a government job
As you can see, I am not impressed. When something that people just havent noticed over years and years becomes news of the day, it's evident that people are just a bit too egocentrical to notice anything outside of their own little worlds. Sheesh. Hidden antennas.
here's some hobo marks with mouseover descriptions