One thing that I see remaining since this past weekend is massive timeouts and latencies in mail delivery to very popular addresses (@hotmail, @rr.com, and @earthlink) @att.net seems to be accepting email without any major issues, hopefully all these issues will continue to slowly return to normal.
-Jim P. > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of > Al Rowland > Sent: Wednesday, January 29, 2003 10:31 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: RE: Dropouts since Saturday 1/25/03 only affecting web traffic? > > > > A single point of consumer data. I haven't checked by home router logs > since Monday night but I was seeing a pattern of significant incoming > port 80 traffic (I'm not running any services) over the last week or so, > similar to increased 1433/1434 traffic before Saturday's flurry. > > Best regards, > ______________________________ > Al Rowland > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On > > Behalf Of Sean Donelan > > Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 9:46 PM > > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > Subject: Dropouts since Saturday 1/25/03 only affecting web traffic? > > > > > > > > According to Matrix Systems (http://average.miq.net/Weekly/markR.html) > > there have been two additional dropouts of global Web > > reachability on January 26 and January 28. These dropouts > > have been for few hours or so, but nearly as large as we saw > > from the SQL worm. However it doesn't seem to affect other > > network services, as measured by Matrix. Just the measured > > web servers. The most recent was tonight from 3-5pm and > > again from 5-7pm EST (http://average.miq.net/) > > > > Any ideas what is causing them? Measurement artifact? Are > > you seeing something strange on your networks about that time? > > > > > > > >