On Sat, 9 Jun 2001 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> If A and B are on two different ISPs that don't currently have a 
> common peering point, they must traverse some other backbone ISP, and 
> this choice may be made differently depending on the origin ISP of 
> the packet....

Thanks for info David. Fascinating, I didn't realize that. How do
2 ISPs become "peers"? They are on same backbone?
I heard on CNN this morning that during height of CA power crisis
a group of anti-US Chinese hackers broke into components of the
CA state power grid control network and although they didn't
reach critical systems an audit showed that with more persistence
they could have exploited vulnerabilities and gained access to
critical areas of the system. This is disturbing. I was more
disturbed by the reported saying somethinb to the effect "The
security issues have been resolved and the system is now totally
secure." Why is such a critical system as power grid even
PUBLICLY accessible. Shouldn't they be on their own closed
network? I hope the nuclear power plants and ballistic missile
control networks are more secure. Yikes!

SDG,
Zach

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have faith." - John 20:29

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