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Another and complete source to analyse graphically the attack is http://k.root-servers.org/ktotal/-weekly.html
Really interesting to view. Note that I post this 5 days after the attack and that my isp dns server is still doing crappy things since the attack. And many of my friends have the same problems.
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Sounds to me like Kevin Mitnick got a new computer.
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Sounds to me like Kevin Mitnick got a new computer.
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This is why us people are feared. Sad but true those people are the ones who make us suffer
the cost of freedom. If we took it in to are own hands things like this would not happen.
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This is why us people are feared. Sad but true those people are the ones who make us suffer
the cost of freedom. If we took it in to are own hands things like this would not happen.
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The www.2600.com website is reporting the following about the attack.
>>2600 has learned that the FBI is having little success in its attempts to investigate an Internet attack which happened last Tuesday. <<
I have yet to hear anything else on the FBI's efforts in this invetigation.
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The www.2600.com website is reporting the following about the attack.
>>2600 has learned that the FBI is having little success in its attempts to investigate an Internet attack which happened last Tuesday. <<
I have yet to hear anything else on the FBI's efforts in this invetigation.
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considering we run several dns servers in house, and have one hell of a cache on our proxy we've really not noticed much. In any case the effects will only be when a query for a domains nameservers is passed, considering the average cache timeouts, and the fact that the rest of the queries are destined for whatever the domains nameservers are I doubt that it will be noticeable unless one *realy* watches his timings.
Still, should the root servers become unavailable for a long period of time, we may have a problem.......
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considering we run several dns servers in house, and have one hell of a cache on our proxy we've really not noticed much. In any case the effects will only be when a query for a domains nameservers is passed, considering the average cache timeouts, and the fact that the rest of the queries are destined for whatever the domains nameservers are I doubt that it will be noticeable unless one *realy* watches his timings.
Still, should the root servers become unavailable for a long period of time, we may have a problem.......