for god sakes, please read articles before they're posted to slashdot.
he invented EMAIL, an email management system.
he is not claiming that he invented electronic email, e.g., email.
all my kids loved jumpstart baby/preschool/kindergarten/1st/etc.
jumpstart baby is a simple as it gets. there's this little bear and the kid can make him do things by clicking [virtually] any keyboard or mouse button.
so the bear will be like "can you help me put on my shoes" and any action works and the bear is like "wow thanks so much".
http://www.amazon.com/Vivendi-Universal-3549-JumpStart-Baby/dp/B000028F4I
What does a nslookup have to do with anything ? Someone's been watching too many "Hacker" movies.
to find the ISP that the IP address is assigned to, you have to start with ARIN (assuming this guy is in the US). Go to ARIN's WHOIS query page at https://ws.arin.net/whois/ -- that'll get you started.
Then, find out of the IP address has been reassigned via the ISP. if the ISP reassigned them via SWIP, the ARIN WHOIS tool will show you the assignments, in order from top to bottom. If the ISP has reassigned the ip address via RWHOIS, then you need to query the ISP's RWHOIS server. The easiest way to do this is to find the RWHOIS server via ARIN's WHOIS tool, then go to http://projects.arin.net/rwhois/prwhois.html -- that's as close as you're going to get with public information.
Once you have the ISP (or the delegate), you have enough information to go to a prosecutor or a judge to get a warrant. A previous ISP I worked for was more than willing to provide this kind of user data but we required a warrant so that we knew we were doing no harm.
Just remember to keep the IP address logs AND time/date of login, in case he's got a dynamic ip address or hopping from starbucks-to-starbucks.
Slashdot is littered with articles about "0-day" vulnerabilities or releases.
Something is only "0-day" within a 24 hour period after the release/announcement has been made. the next 24 hour period is called "1-day". 24 hours after, it's "2-day", get it?
This phrase originated back in the BBS days when pirate boards advertised how new their pirated software was. 0-day was ultra-cool, 0-1 day was still good, and most carried 0-30 day software.
At this point, "Solaris Telnet 0-day vulnerability" should have been written:
a. Solaris Telnet vulnerability
b. Solaris Telnet 18-day vulnerability
c. Solaris Telnet once-upon-a-time-was-obviously-a-0-day vulnerability
just because someone labeled something as "0-day" doesn't mean that it keeps getting called "0-day" afterwards. The original label is simply there to signify that the release is new.
for god sakes, please read articles before they're posted to slashdot. he invented EMAIL, an email management system. he is not claiming that he invented electronic email, e.g., email.
http://helpherandchild.blogspot.com/ seems to be the blog in question. doesnt seem archive.org has it.
all my kids loved jumpstart baby/preschool/kindergarten/1st/etc. jumpstart baby is a simple as it gets. there's this little bear and the kid can make him do things by clicking [virtually] any keyboard or mouse button. so the bear will be like "can you help me put on my shoes" and any action works and the bear is like "wow thanks so much". http://www.amazon.com/Vivendi-Universal-3549-JumpStart-Baby/dp/B000028F4I
What does a nslookup have to do with anything ? Someone's been watching too many "Hacker" movies.
to find the ISP that the IP address is assigned to, you have to start with ARIN (assuming this guy is in the US). Go to ARIN's WHOIS query page at https://ws.arin.net/whois/ -- that'll get you started.
Then, find out of the IP address has been reassigned via the ISP. if the ISP reassigned them via SWIP, the ARIN WHOIS tool will show you the assignments, in order from top to bottom. If the ISP has reassigned the ip address via RWHOIS, then you need to query the ISP's RWHOIS server. The easiest way to do this is to find the RWHOIS server via ARIN's WHOIS tool, then go to http://projects.arin.net/rwhois/prwhois.html -- that's as close as you're going to get with public information.
Once you have the ISP (or the delegate), you have enough information to go to a prosecutor or a judge to get a warrant. A previous ISP I worked for was more than willing to provide this kind of user data but we required a warrant so that we knew we were doing no harm.
Just remember to keep the IP address logs AND time/date of login, in case he's got a dynamic ip address or hopping from starbucks-to-starbucks.
http://argus.tcp4me.com/
Did you read the article? He released qmail to the public domain...
:)
package it up and put it under whatever license you want
Slashdot is littered with articles about "0-day" vulnerabilities or releases. Something is only "0-day" within a 24 hour period after the release/announcement has been made. the next 24 hour period is called "1-day". 24 hours after, it's "2-day", get it?
This phrase originated back in the BBS days when pirate boards advertised how new their pirated software was. 0-day was ultra-cool, 0-1 day was still good, and most carried 0-30 day software.
At this point, "Solaris Telnet 0-day vulnerability" should have been written:
a. Solaris Telnet vulnerability
b. Solaris Telnet 18-day vulnerability
c. Solaris Telnet once-upon-a-time-was-obviously-a-0-day vulnerability
just because someone labeled something as "0-day" doesn't mean that it keeps getting called "0-day" afterwards. The original label is simply there to signify that the release is new.
because it's 4am and he's already getting hammered hard: here's a mirror