well, I've used to run a bunch of Sun Ultra machines. Across the street there was a new building built. When they were laying the foundation, they used piles and as they drive them into the ground we didn't felt any vibration, but the hard drives went off like cazy. I think, we've exchanged 10 or so (from around 100 machines) in two weeks.
This thing propagates using USB flash drives, what ISPs are you talking about?
OTOH, during Estonia DDoS incident, it was proclaimed, that a cyberattack against a NATO-country might require an "asymmetric response" from the military of all alliance members. So, in the best memories of Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, as a response to this "attack", US would have a reason for a military aggression.
Cannot wait, when will it be discovered, that Iran government is responsible for this piece of malware.
Well, I cannot confirm, if in the past there were direct links between the Russian' Transtelecom (or Rostelecom, I'm not sure, which one provided the connection) and Georgian segment of internet, but even if they were shut, the connectivity is still available:
this one is from a Unix box hosted on the premises of a Russian hosting provider Agava
ivlad@iddater ~ 1004% tcptraceroute www.parliament.ge Selected device eth0, address 89.108.83.67, port 59450 for outgoing packets Tracing the path to www.parliament.ge (81.95.174.252) on TCP port 80 (www), 30 hops max 1 c3750-gw.agava.net (89.108.64.1) 21.758 ms 0.424 ms 0.644 ms 2 skymedia-po-gw.netflow.ru (88.212.194.49) 0.376 ms 0.324 ms 0.403 ms 3 bb-kiae1.2.netflow.ru (88.212.192.65) 0.297 ms 0.328 ms 0.255 ms 4 MSK15-GE11.496.transtelecom.net (217.150.45.186) 1.189 ms 1.175 ms 0.985 ms 5 * 195.66.224.185 61.393 ms 61.488 ms 6 te2-7.ccr02.ams03.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.1.169) 75.530 ms 75.435 ms 75.456 ms 7 te2-7.ccr01.fra03.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.1.161) 76.914 ms 76.886 ms 76.900 ms 8 gi2-0-0.core01.fra03.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.1.29) 76.938 ms 76.790 ms 76.857 ms 9 turk-telecom.demarc.cogentco.com (149.6.84.182) 132.477 ms 137.922 ms 136.579 ms 10 ulus_t1_1-ulus_ebgp_1.turktelekom.com.tr (212.156.119.241) 125.867 ms 125.779 ms 125.835 ms 11 * * * 12 195.175.5.2 145.380 ms 145.373 ms 145.259 ms 13 host-80-241-178-69.deltanet.ge (80.241.178.69) 145.551 ms 145.540 ms 145.563 ms 14 host-80-241-177-2.deltanet.ge (80.241.177.2) 145.773 ms 145.688 ms 146.318 ms 15 host-80-241-177-58.deltanet.ge (80.241.177.58) 145.932 ms 146.160 ms 146.408 ms 16 magti-gsm.ge (212.58.99.62) 102.633 ms 102.674 ms 102.696 ms 17 81.95.171.217 102.734 ms 102.205 ms 102.484 ms 18 81.95.174.100 104.032 ms 104.264 ms 104.010 ms 19 www.parliament.ge (81.95.174.252) [open] 104.046 ms 103.397 ms 103.236 ms ivlad@iddater ~ 1005%
this one is from my home LAN:
nifty:ivlad $ traceroute www.parliament.ge traceroute to spd.parliament.ge (81.95.174.252), 64 hops max, 40 byte packets 1 192.168.1.1 (192.168.1.1) 35.689 ms 2.223 ms 2.176 ms 2 192.168.254.254 (192.168.254.254) 5.787 ms 6.072 ms 5.282 ms 3 88.84.199.185 (88.84.199.185) 5.807 ms 4.920 ms 4.751 ms 4 10.10.156.21 (10.10.156.21) 7.500 ms 11.738 ms 7.654 ms 5 10.10.156.17 (10.10.156.17) 8.063 ms 10.136 ms 18.826 ms 6 80.252.130.5 (80.252.130.5) 21.015 ms 10.073 ms 12.090 ms 7 m9-bb-vlan515.msk.corbina.net (195.14.42.169) 53.656 ms 49.062 ms 55.743 ms 8 k9-bb-teng4-3.msk.corbina.net (195.14.60.129) 76.398 ms 57.992 ms 49.384 ms 9 ko-bb-teng12-1.msk.corbina.net (195.14.54.124) 64.689 ms 66.466 ms 68.705 ms 10 tc-bb-po1.sto.corbina.net (195.14.54.102) 68.070 ms 65.773 ms 76.414 ms 11 te3-3.ccr01.sto01.atlas.cogentco.com (149.6.168.93) 94.351 ms 107.097 ms * 12 te1-2.ccr01.mma01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.3.9) 88.611 ms te1-3.ccr01.ham01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.3.93) 103.790 ms te1-2.ccr01.mma01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.3.9) 98.152 ms 13 te3-3.ccr01.ham01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.3.205) 91.730 ms te2-2.ccr01.dus01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.3.210) 91.032 ms te1-2.ccr01.cph01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.0.49) 97.736 ms 14 te2-2.ccr01.dus01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.3.210) 100.163 ms gi5-0-0.core01.dus01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.3.125) 105.004 ms te7-2.mpd02.fra03.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.3.69) 88.775 ms 15 te8-2.mpd02.fra03.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.0.121) 100.849 ms turk-telecom.demarc.cogentco.com (149.6.84.182) 221.007 ms 208.276 ms 16 ulus_t1_1-ulus_ebgp_1.turktelekom.com.tr (212.156.119.241) 174.456 ms turk-telecom.demarc.cogentco.com (149.6.84.182) 362.090 ms po2-0.core01.dus01.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.1.189) 103.195 ms 17 turk-telecom.demarc.cogentco.com (149.6.84.182) 181.875 ms gi2-0-0.core01.fra03.atlas.cogentco.com (130.117.1.29) 90.115 ms ulus_t1_1-ulus_ebgp_1.turktelekom.com.tr (212
Pretty much everyone here knows, that the election was forged. There is no doubt about that, as there multiple evidence from variuos sources. Some believe, Russia goes back into 1937, but, on the other hand, if you remember, last US elections was no better.:( Still both Putin and Bush have won. I don't think, that without forgery, the victory of the "Edinaya Rossiya" (Putin's party) would be that clear.
I don't know, if there are better countries, where democracy and plebiscite still matter.:(
The artice about the adopting Linux in Russia is not really true. The story with the arresting the school director has got a bit of public attention, so the community of Russian Linux users started an initiative (sorry, the blog entry in in Russian, here is a google translation) to help teachers getting more knowledge about Linux. Many Russian LUGs are participating, but, really there not that many techers, who are willing to adopt Linux.
Cisco has a line of Fibre Channel switches called Cisco MDS. They are used for Storage Area Networks and provide FC, iSCSI and FCIP capabilities. The high-end series, 95xx, look pretty much like Catalysts 65xx (with FC interfaces, of course), and 92xx use 7200 chasis.
Those systems are povered by Linux, given, you have a SmartNet contract, you can download updates for them containing kernel with initd and rootfs. Moreover, by simply observing boot process, one can conclude, they are Linux-powered. However, Cisco doesn't provide a source code for them.
I've also heard (but this is not confirmed), that their main competitor in SAN market, Brocade, is also using Linux as a basis for their FabricOS. Did anyone checked that?
SecurID (the original SDTI) algorithm is flawed, as it was demonstrated by atStake, and the ACE Server protocol also has some issues. (I've collected notes about it). May be, sonsidering OATH OTP will solve the issues with the SDTI problems, but anyway perely coded Web applications (like those on the http://tools.cisco.com/ will always be a security hole.
once chinese wanted to crack Pentagon mainframe. Every chinese citizen tried a password. Third of the guesses was "Mao Tze Dun". At the try no 238 456 293 Pentagon's mainframe agreed, that password was "Mao Tze Dun".
Nope, "liberal" here refers to a group of people providing political lobby to anyone with enough money. So, now they're building a foundation for bring their "clients" to the presidency.
Well, I've heard Bush told, that world-wide freedom (whateve that means for him) is the task number one. Not the good economic in his country.
I've probably missed the moment when USA president became the world president...;)
why? I mean if we can deliver it and you cannot, and otherwize you've got something, which we cannot deliver, why shouldn't help each other? Do you still think in therms of the Cold War?
Needless to say, I didn't buy any of it, but in some places, people have no trouble with this kind of behaviour.
Well, bad luck for you.
I think, I've bougth "real" CD once and never mentioned any difference in sound with "pirated" one. So, i don't care. Anyway from that 15 bucks the singer will get maybe one or two. The rest will get SONY Music, Universal, RIAA whatever.
They are rich enough. I would give Robbie Williams (or even Ms. Spears or Spice Girls if I would listen their music) their buck, no prob. about that. But well, not chanse for labels. I do not want and will not pay 10 to 20 bucks for simply copiyng a CD, this is what they are doing.
The same count for Microsoft... Ah, well I use Linux anyway.
well, I've used to run a bunch of Sun Ultra machines. Across the street there was a new building built. When they were laying the foundation, they used piles and as they drive them into the ground we didn't felt any vibration, but the hard drives went off like cazy. I think, we've exchanged 10 or so (from around 100 machines) in two weeks.
This thing propagates using USB flash drives, what ISPs are you talking about? OTOH, during Estonia DDoS incident, it was proclaimed, that a cyberattack against a NATO-country might require an "asymmetric response" from the military of all alliance members. So, in the best memories of Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, as a response to this "attack", US would have a reason for a military aggression. Cannot wait, when will it be discovered, that Iran government is responsible for this piece of malware.
Direct link to announce: http://forum.doom9.org/showthread.php?p=1207578#post1207578
Can we, mere Soviet Russians spies^W bloggers join this community? Please-please-please. Have an invite to KGB torrent tracker to trade.
Well, I cannot confirm, if in the past there were direct links between the Russian' Transtelecom (or Rostelecom, I'm not sure, which one provided the connection) and Georgian segment of internet, but even if they were shut, the connectivity is still available:
this one is from a Unix box hosted on the premises of a Russian hosting provider Agava
this one is from my home LAN:
Pretty much everyone here knows, that the election was forged. There is no doubt about that, as there multiple evidence from variuos sources. Some believe, Russia goes back into 1937, but, on the other hand, if you remember, last US elections was no better. :( Still both Putin and Bush have won. I don't think, that without forgery, the victory of the "Edinaya Rossiya" (Putin's party) would be that clear.
:(
I don't know, if there are better countries, where democracy and plebiscite still matter.
In Soviet Russia E-mail reads your Ballmer
I think, the $3600 device is nothing more, but a Nokia 770 (that is clear from the photos) runnig GUI for Kismet or some sort of other Wifi scanner.
;)
Good margin!
The artice about the adopting Linux in Russia is not really true. The story with the arresting the school director has got a bit of public attention, so the community of Russian Linux users started an initiative (sorry, the blog entry in in Russian, here is a google translation) to help teachers getting more knowledge about Linux. Many Russian LUGs are participating, but, really there not that many techers, who are willing to adopt Linux.
Cisco has a line of Fibre Channel switches called Cisco MDS. They are used for Storage Area Networks and provide FC, iSCSI and FCIP capabilities. The high-end series, 95xx, look pretty much like Catalysts 65xx (with FC interfaces, of course), and 92xx use 7200 chasis.
Those systems are povered by Linux, given, you have a SmartNet contract, you can download updates for them containing kernel with initd and rootfs. Moreover, by simply observing boot process, one can conclude, they are Linux-powered. However, Cisco doesn't provide a source code for them.
I've also heard (but this is not confirmed), that their main competitor in SAN market, Brocade, is also using Linux as a basis for their FabricOS. Did anyone checked that?
... but there are also a few guides to the applications security available: http://www.nsa.gov/snac/downloads_all.cfm
my favorite are Cisco IOS and Microsoft CA guides
The chief of the "Skylink Systems",a company producing combat system "T-1" was not immidiatly available for comments.
Give a try to CommuniGate. trial is free. It provides more, than ordinary user needs, and may be suitable for your case.
SecurID (the original SDTI) algorithm is flawed, as it was demonstrated by atStake, and the ACE Server protocol also has some issues. (I've collected notes about it). May be, sonsidering OATH OTP will solve the issues with the SDTI problems, but anyway perely coded Web applications (like those on the http://tools.cisco.com/ will always be a security hole.
once chinese wanted to crack Pentagon mainframe. Every chinese citizen tried a password. Third of the guesses was "Mao Tze Dun". At the try no 238 456 293 Pentagon's mainframe agreed, that password was "Mao Tze Dun".
Nope, "liberal" here refers to a group of people providing political lobby to anyone with enough money. So, now they're building a foundation for bring their "clients" to the presidency.
Well, I've heard Bush told, that world-wide freedom (whateve that means for him) is the task number one. Not the good economic in his country. I've probably missed the moment when USA president became the world president... ;)
why? I mean if we can deliver it and you cannot, and otherwize you've got something, which we cannot deliver, why shouldn't help each other? Do you still think in therms of the Cold War?
poor trees :(
SILC is a good example.
Well, bad luck for you.
I think, I've bougth "real" CD once and never mentioned any difference in sound with "pirated" one. So, i don't care. Anyway from that 15 bucks the singer will get maybe one or two. The rest will get SONY Music, Universal, RIAA whatever.
They are rich enough. I would give Robbie Williams (or even Ms. Spears or Spice Girls if I would listen their music) their buck, no prob. about that. But well, not chanse for labels. I do not want and will not pay 10 to 20 bucks for simply copiyng a CD, this is what they are doing.
The same count for Microsoft... Ah, well I use Linux anyway.
Now, put my karma to bad-bad-bad!
When going down the Rabbit-Hole^W^W Krubera-Voronia, did they meet Alice?
Could Osama Ben Laden now rent it to plan his next attack?
you know the end...
why not drop a few hundred bucks on a single PPC box that you can start a GCC make on, and let it run for a week if need be?
Hey! It was released yesterday! Give them a week! It is sill compiling! ;)