> Hi folks > > I also noticed today that gtkg seems to try to a lot of port 80 servers. > I think we should try to reduce the risk of gtkg being used for DDOS > attacks by forbidding downloads from ports < 1024. > > Is there some header except the User-Agent by which gtkg can assert that > the peer it's trying to download from is really a member of the gnutella > network and not an innocent Squid or something?
But what if the file really is hosted on a webserver. And this was the intention? I know people were / are working / talking about a gnutella apache module to support this and the module would only be used to track alternate locations ala bittorrent. - Jeroen ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: Perforce Software. Perforce is the Fast Software Configuration Management System offering advanced branching capabilities and atomic changes on 50+ platforms. Free Eval! http://www.perforce.com/perforce/loadprog.html _______________________________________________ Gtk-gnutella-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gtk-gnutella-devel
