Hi

I do not want to receive these emails . I received a lot of emails and none 
were really to me or to help me in what I said. So now I want to stop receiving 
these emails . I sent an email to " [email protected] " I sent my personal email 
, I use to serious things , I would like to know why the email is that web page 
!? https://forum.nginx.org/read.php?2,267331,267333 exposing my email and the 
material contained therein , the google search ! And I just looked for a " 
nginx " to get an error page of google searches, page which contained and still 
contains some personal documents. Look I'm trying to do the easy method , but I 
think I'll have to get justice.




________________________________
De: nginx <[email protected]> em nome de CJ Ess <[email protected]>
Enviado: sexta-feira, 3 de junho de 2016 14:05
Para: [email protected]
Assunto: Re: Problem

I once knew a guy who convinced someone they had hacked their site by making a 
DNS entry to 127.0.0.1. So when the guy tried to access the "other" site his 
passwords worked, all his files were there, it was even running the same 
software! He made changes on his site and they instantly appeared on the 
"other" site. He deleted files off the "other" site and they were removed from 
his site - obviously in retaliation!. So after an hour or so of trying to 
figure out how his server is being accessed the guy just goes completely 
ballistic and starts calling the police and then the FBI (this was in the US). 
The FBI did investigate and visited the prankster in person. He explained what 
loopback was and how the prank worked, and the FBI agents thought it was pretty 
funny - they do have a sense of humor after all.


On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 3:39 AM, Maxim Konovalov 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On 6/3/16 7:33 AM, [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> wrote:
> Perhaps in a future release of Nginx, the error pages should not
> contain any reference to nginx. That is the only way I can figure
> out this person came up with the idea of complaining to the list.
> (Assuming this isn't spam to encourage use to click on that website
> link.)
>
Actually, a number of such complains is still surprisingly low.

> I think another mistake is to have the error page indicate the rev
> of nginx. That is an easy way for someone to spot a vulnerable rev
> of the nginx on a server.
>

--
Maxim Konovalov

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