-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far way, someone said...
> Phil Brutsche <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > This is all basically a set of port scans of people looking for holes on > > 216.15.108.184. They are all normal on today's internet, and (IMO) not > > something to worry about unless the thing has been hacked. > > I still send a note to [EMAIL PROTECTED] in these > cases (try "whois IP-ADDRESS"). The ISPs have been very receptive to > my reports. I gave up a short while ago, mostly because all these "scans" were one-time deals and I didn't want to waste my time writing notes. I have better things to do with my time, like mess with LDAP :) > I used to do the same thing for spam a *long* time ago, but > obviously not any more. I have the "luxury" of running my own mail server, so I just manually blacklist the offending IP and be done with it :) - -- - ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Phil Brutsche [EMAIL PROTECTED] GPG fingerprint: 9BF9 D84C 37D0 4FA7 1F2D 7E5E FD94 D264 50DE 1CFC GPG key id: 50DE1CFC GPG public key: http://tux.creighton.edu/~pbrutsch/gpg-public-key.asc -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Made with pgp4pine iD8DBQE7Vf4o/ZTSZFDeHPwRAoYHAKDEsjKvn5ZAte+oX/CLZSRUOueg/QCfcflx 8U0+LpFmmCdxoz8qCrKgSPo= =ug3l -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----