Re: [AusNOG] Looking for assistance from someone at commander regarding a clients hosted domain/email

2021-08-27 Thread Phil Memery
Greetings all

Huge thank you to Anthony Schofield & Richard Stockins of Vocus for your 
tremendous assistance on this. Awesome guys thank you.


Regards, Phil Memery

- Original Message -
From: "Phil Memery" 
To: "ausnog" 
Sent: Friday, 27 August, 2021 5:32:19 PM
Subject: [AusNOG] Looking for assistance from someone at commander regarding a 
clients hosted domain/email

Greetings

I am hoping I can make contact with someone at Commander regarding the 
hosting of a clients domain.

The MX records point to "10 mx-hosted-02.commander.net.au"

Please contact off list.

The domain owner has had a terrible time losing all records and 
passwords etc, so we are looking at what he needs to provide to 
commander to regain access to his domain (Statutory declaration or what 
ever is needed, and who to send it to etc).


Regards,

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Phil Memery www.clevernetit.com.au  A.B.N: 24 172 081 538

+61 417 315 935

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[AusNOG] Looking for assistance from someone at commander regarding a clients hosted domain/email

2021-08-27 Thread Phil Memery

Greetings

I am hoping I can make contact with someone at Commander regarding the 
hosting of a clients domain.


The MX records point to "10 mx-hosted-02.commander.net.au"

Please contact off list.

The domain owner has had a terrible time losing all records and 
passwords etc, so we are looking at what he needs to provide to 
commander to regain access to his domain (Statutory declaration or what 
ever is needed, and who to send it to etc).



Regards,

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Phil Memery www.clevernetit.com.au  A.B.N: 24 172 081 538

+61 417 315 935

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Re: [AusNOG] Bigpond email abuse

2021-06-01 Thread Phil Memery
Greetings James (and Others)

Yes I have seen it (I have well and truly deleted the SPAM emails and moved on 
though).

It was a google hosted domain. From recollection the user changed his access 
details related to the domain and his email, end of problem. So it seems not to 
be just a bigpond or Google issue.

A good reminder to "change passwords" and make sure they are of a good secure 
structure. I am often still amazed out how poor some individuals are about 
passwords.


Regards, Phil

- Original Message -
From: "James Williamson" 
To: ausnog@lists.ausnog.net
Sent: Wednesday, 2 June, 2021 3:03:22 PM
Subject: [AusNOG] Bigpond email abuse

Hi All,

We saw an external user a few months ago who had their Bigpond address 
compromised, and the entire mailbox dumped. Afterwards, they discovered friends 
and colleagues are receiving replies to years-old threads (although the new 
message is from a random email address), usually with some sort of phishing 
link. Now we've seen it again with a second and unrelated Bigpond user.

Has anybody seen anything similar before? I'm not familiar with this breed of 
spam, and to see two of them from the same host has my curiosity up a bit. 
Trying to find other cases like this eluded my Google-fu.

[example, redactions mine]
From: Robyn ***  
Sent: Friday, 21 May 2021 2:32 AM
To: Allison *** 
Subject: Re: RE: 

--EMAIL FROM EXTERNAL ADDRESS, CHECK LINKS & ATTACHMENTS BEFORE CLICKING OR 
OPENING THEM--
 

Good afternoon,
It's Robyn ***. Please look at the report and deal with any problems. Here 
is the document link:
https://1drv.ms/u/s!***?e=ysj***
password: 5214 


On 2018-12-07 15:34, Allison  wrote:
Hi Allison

Thanks so much for your time in showing me around  recently. I was 
really  impressed with your knowledge of the programs and facilities, 
and the * in general.
(snip)
[end example]

Cheers,
James
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[AusNOG] Replies off list regarding a small problem regarding bigpond email password recovery

2020-08-23 Thread Phil Memery

Greetings All

I know this is low a grade request. But I have exhausted my attempts to 
assist this client, and I ask for replies of list please.


I have an aged customer who has lost his email password and following 
the system we get to a solution of "a password reset will be emailed" 
and it has his email address (that he obviously can not access). I could 
not find a method to talk to a human.


Regards

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Phil Memery www.clevernetit.com.au  A.B.N: 66 146 234 648
DELL PartnerDirect Registered
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[AusNOG] Support person of knowledge from Optus NBN connections. Request for off list contact please?

2019-04-02 Thread Phil Memery

Greetings.

I need to make contact with a person of knowledge that has the ability 
to effect change. Optus NBN


Contact off list please?

No need for unnecessary noise here.


Thank you very much in advance.

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Phil Memery www.clevernetit.com.au  A.B.N: 66 146 234 648
DELL PartnerDirect Registered
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Re: [AusNOG] Assistance and Access Bill moves to PJCIS

2018-11-21 Thread Phil Memery
 gov't scare tactics. 
Scare people
enough and they'll 'give up liberty for a
little safety'.
They do not read like objective journalism.'

How did they catch everyone without
eliminating privacy
anyway?  Good ol' police work?

scott
























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Re: [AusNOG] Dutton decryption bill

2018-09-12 Thread Phil Memery

Just as an example of how "having the keys to decrypt things" can go wrong.

John Walker, Jr.

In 1967, Navy communications officer John Walker, Jr. snuck into the 
Soviet Embassy in Washington, D.C., and offered to sell secrets. He then 
handed over settings for the KL-47 cipher machine, which decoded 
sensitive US Navy messages etc etc.. According to Vitaly 
Yurchenko, a KGB defector, “It was the greatest case in KGB history. We 
deciphered millions of your messages. If there had been a war, we would 
have won it.”


https://listverse.com/2010/07/04/top-10-traitors-in-us-history/


There are plenty of other examples of why NOT to allow this bill.

Regards



On 12/09/18 17:20, Paul Julian wrote:


I think you hit the nail on the head Mark.

Regards

Paul

On Sep 12, 2018, at 10:55 AM, Paul Wilkins <mailto:paulwilkins...@gmail.com>> wrote:




I can't wait to see the full extent of responses. What I've seen
so far speaks of not just the quality and detail of submissions,
but the broad base of responses, ensuring representation of a
diversity of interests, and raising a broad range of concerns and
recommendations.

It's a strong vindication for the processes of representative
democracy that so many have taken the time to make a contribution.

It isn’t “representative democracy” when the only reason the Govt is 
pursuing this is because the Americans said they wanted it in a 5-eyes 
meeting.


https://www.itnews.com.au/news/five-eyes-nations-to-force-encryption-backdoors-511865

I think we can all expect the “broad range of concerns and 
recommendations” to be ignored by the Government because they’re a 
client State of the Americans and will bloody-well do what they’re 
told, no matter what Australian voters say they want.


They might make some amendments around the edges, but only in places 
where doing so doesn’t erect any significant barrier in the way of 
them doing what they’ve already decided they’re going to do.


Then, in three years, they’ll come back and say they need to 
“modernize Australia’s national security laws” (again) and undo the 
amendments. Which is actually precisely what they’re doing now in 
relation to the limits they placed on themselves three years ago 
regarding data retention, if you’ll recall.


It is a corruption of the democratic process, not an example of it 
functioning properly. There is no democratic brake on the advancement 
of the intelligence community’s powers, they continue to do whatever 
the hell they want, with no recourse.


Given the circumstances, it’s a bit naïve to suggest otherwise, don’t 
you think?


  - mark



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