Problem with any of these scenarios is that according to the AWS forum post, he's been getting rogue Netflix traffic for 4 days. No dns server or mainstream client is going to keep a 60 second TTL record for 4 days.
It's either an issue at AWS completely unrelated to DNS, or an issue in Netflix clients. With it being in TV's, BluRay players, Xboxes, IOS, Wii's, etc... who knows what client the issue could be in... I wonder if the forum poster could capture the browser string and help debug?
No dns server (or mainstream browser) caches something for 4 days when given a low TTL. I've seen some that cache for a few hours, maybe up to a day, but 4 days? Really?
Something else is going on. I kind of wonder about the Netflix clients built into all those TV's, Mobile Phones, and DVD players.
There's actually a lot more to it than this... plenty of conspiracy around whether or not WMB was actually about to fail or not.
The administration at the time had put rules in place to keep bank stocks from being shorted. Turns out WMI and Indymac were not on that list... and guess which two failed?
Any wonder that the only two banks that weren't protected failed?
And why weren't they protected? Couldn't possibly be a slurping of cash from west coast to east coast? Anyone curious how it is that two of the west coast's largest banks managed to get handed over to east coast banks for pennies on the dollar?
Did you know that WMI was shopping out WMB prior to the seizure, and couldn't figure out why no one was interested...? Turns out the FDIC had already gone to all the suitors and told them a seizure was in the works. Small wonder no one wanted to buy at market value, knowing they could get it for pennies on the dollar from their FDIC buddies. The FDIC directly and intentionally caused a huge loss in value to WMI shareholders.
I highly recommend some googling, specifically look into the lawsuit brought by WMI's shareholders against Chase and the federal gov't.
Much of the consequence actually shifts to the business accepting the card. Joe Hacker orders X Widget using Bob Jones credit card, the business ships X Widget, Joe Hacker gets X Widget, Bob Jones reports it and gets his money back. Who's left holding the bag? I'll give you a hint, it's not the credit card companies... That dough gets yanked back out of the business's account, along with a handy little service charge.
The other thing that never ceases to amaze me is that most merchants pay the credit card fees as a percentage of each transaction. It's a percentage... and yet the costs still go up over time! I don't think a year has passed without a new notification from Visa/Mastercard that they're going to be taking a slightly bigger chunk.
Bah... I loved win2k... only reason I upgraded? One day I noticed my friend was able to alt-tab out of a game way faster under XP than I could in win2k. Waayyyy handy when you're manning the phones at work.;-)
The problem is that Spamcop encourages people to use it as a way to reject mail at the entry point, rather than as a tool for spam scoring (Spamassassin, etc.)...
We frequently get blocked because one of our users desktops has been pwned and the virii manage to SMTP-AUTH using our users login and password. (usually not too hard to manage) These ones we can catch pretty quickly with our logging system.
The really painful ones are when someone finds a hole in an application we're hosting for someone and spews mail through it (formmail.pl, anyone.;-)... They eventually manage to hit one of spamcops honeypot addresses and we instantly get blocked in a manner in which we cannot track where the rogue spam came from! Spamcop does not provide copies of emails that hit their honeypot, for understandable reasons, but surely they realize that it also makes it impossible for an admin of a large organization to pin down the spammer...
Spamcop needs to adjust their website to explain how to use their list to score spam, and they need to ditch the honeypots and stick to user-submitted spam until they decide to work with the ISP's that are actually trying to eliminate it.
On the incomming mail side, we love Spamcop. We score the mail higher using their blacklist and let our users set the trigger level for either deletion or automatic filtering to a sub-folder.
Hmmm... anyone else on an AT&T cable modem not able to get to www.warforge.net? I can resolve the name, I can ping it, but I can't browse to it. When I use my connection at the office I can get to it just fine. I've had this problem since I first discovered warforge.net a couple of weeks ago. Is AT&T blocking my access?
Problem with any of these scenarios is that according to the AWS forum post, he's been getting rogue Netflix traffic for 4 days. No dns server or mainstream client is going to keep a 60 second TTL record for 4 days. It's either an issue at AWS completely unrelated to DNS, or an issue in Netflix clients. With it being in TV's, BluRay players, Xboxes, IOS, Wii's, etc... who knows what client the issue could be in... I wonder if the forum poster could capture the browser string and help debug?
No dns server (or mainstream browser) caches something for 4 days when given a low TTL. I've seen some that cache for a few hours, maybe up to a day, but 4 days? Really? Something else is going on. I kind of wonder about the Netflix clients built into all those TV's, Mobile Phones, and DVD players.
There's actually a lot more to it than this... plenty of conspiracy around whether or not WMB was actually about to fail or not. The administration at the time had put rules in place to keep bank stocks from being shorted. Turns out WMI and Indymac were not on that list... and guess which two failed? Any wonder that the only two banks that weren't protected failed? And why weren't they protected? Couldn't possibly be a slurping of cash from west coast to east coast? Anyone curious how it is that two of the west coast's largest banks managed to get handed over to east coast banks for pennies on the dollar? Did you know that WMI was shopping out WMB prior to the seizure, and couldn't figure out why no one was interested...? Turns out the FDIC had already gone to all the suitors and told them a seizure was in the works. Small wonder no one wanted to buy at market value, knowing they could get it for pennies on the dollar from their FDIC buddies. The FDIC directly and intentionally caused a huge loss in value to WMI shareholders. I highly recommend some googling, specifically look into the lawsuit brought by WMI's shareholders against Chase and the federal gov't.
Much of the consequence actually shifts to the business accepting the card. Joe Hacker orders X Widget using Bob Jones credit card, the business ships X Widget, Joe Hacker gets X Widget, Bob Jones reports it and gets his money back. Who's left holding the bag? I'll give you a hint, it's not the credit card companies... That dough gets yanked back out of the business's account, along with a handy little service charge.
The other thing that never ceases to amaze me is that most merchants pay the credit card fees as a percentage of each transaction. It's a percentage... and yet the costs still go up over time! I don't think a year has passed without a new notification from Visa/Mastercard that they're going to be taking a slightly bigger chunk.
Bah... I loved win2k... only reason I upgraded? One day I noticed my friend was able to alt-tab out of a game way faster under XP than I could in win2k. Waayyyy handy when you're manning the phones at work. ;-)
What else did XP add to win2k exactly?
The problem is that Spamcop encourages people to use it as a way to reject mail at the entry point, rather than as a tool for spam scoring (Spamassassin, etc.) ...
;-) ... They eventually manage to hit one of spamcops honeypot addresses and we instantly get blocked in a manner in which we cannot track where the rogue spam came from! Spamcop does not provide copies of emails that hit their honeypot, for understandable reasons, but surely they realize that it also makes it impossible for an admin of a large organization to pin down the spammer...
We frequently get blocked because one of our users desktops has been pwned and the virii manage to SMTP-AUTH using our users login and password. (usually not too hard to manage) These ones we can catch pretty quickly with our logging system.
The really painful ones are when someone finds a hole in an application we're hosting for someone and spews mail through it (formmail.pl, anyone.
Spamcop needs to adjust their website to explain how to use their list to score spam, and they need to ditch the honeypots and stick to user-submitted spam until they decide to work with the ISP's that are actually trying to eliminate it.
On the incomming mail side, we love Spamcop. We score the mail higher using their blacklist and let our users set the trigger level for either deletion or automatic filtering to a sub-folder.
Hmmm... anyone else on an AT&T cable modem not able to get to www.warforge.net? I can resolve the name, I can ping it, but I can't browse to it. When I use my connection at the office I can get to it just fine. I've had this problem since I first discovered warforge.net a couple of weeks ago. Is AT&T blocking my access?
Sometimes speed is everything...