Well, if I don't know anything else at least I know
that you're the most friendly, helpful and informative
guy I've ever met*grin*
Seriously though, no flamebait here but why do I see
that funny junk when I run whois on microsoft.com and
aol.com? Whois doesn't interact with DNS at all? I
ju
I just got the Microsoft spin on it lol.
"This was an operational error, and not the result of any issue with
Microsoft or third-party products nor the security of our networks.
Microsoft regrets any inconvenience caused to customers due to this
issue," the company added.
http://computerworld.com
On Thu, 25 Jan 2001, Allen May wrote:
> I'm pretty sure I understand how DNS registers servers that are internal and
> they were added in that way, but it only seems to be showing the ones with
> funky names. Seems like there would have been SOME legitimate names in
> there, right?
It appears a
asha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Allen May" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, January 25, 2001 11:26 AM
Subject: Re: OT: MS router fixed (was whois microsoft.com)
> Well, if I don't know anything else at least I know
> that you're the
On Thu, 25 Jan 2001, Dan West wrote:
> Well, if I don't know anything else at least I know
> that you're the most friendly, helpful and informative
> guy I've ever met*grin*
Some days I am...your just lucky you caught me on one..
> Seriously though, no flamebait here but why do I see
> t
whoooaa there, cowboy..!! I would say it certainly
has S/THING to do with S/THING...C'mon!!
I wasn't doing a whois on
microsoft.blah.blah.whatever. I was running whois on
"microsoft.com". Some DNS redirection at the very
least was happening.
To say it "has nothing to do with anything" is jus
On Thu, 25 Jan 2001, Dan West wrote:
> whoooaa there, cowboy..!! I would say it certainly
> has S/THING to do with S/THING...C'mon!!
Only because you apparently have no idea how DNS works.
> I wasn't doing a whois on
> microsoft.blah.blah.whatever. I was running whois on
> "microsoft.com".
On Thu, 25 Jan 2001, Dan West wrote:
> Hmmm...doesn't sound like quite the whole picture. How
> would that explain what happened when you ran a
> "whois" on microsoft.com? Did anyone else see
> that?!?! It was pretty funny. -- about 15 lines of
> hacker orgs and comments about MS.
That h
Which whois tool do you use? Some of them return all
the hosts as well that contain microsoft.com somewhere
in the mix. I checked it off on throughout their
problem and it was correct.
--- Dan West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hmmm...doesn't sound like quite the whole picture.
> How
> would tha
Hmmm...doesn't sound like quite the whole picture. How
would that explain what happened when you ran a
"whois" on microsoft.com? Did anyone else see
that?!?! It was pretty funny. -- about 15 lines of
hacker orgs and comments about MS.
A more frightening possibilitydid someone hack the
D
http://www.microsoft.com/info/siteaccess.htm
Microsoft Explains Site Access Issues
On Tuesday evening and Wednesday, many Microsoft
customers had difficulty accessing the company's Web
sites. The cause has been determined, and the issue is
resolved.
At 6:30 p.m. Tuesday (PST), a Microsoft tech
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