> There is so much of it, I liken it to Internet background
> radiation. In
> fact, if I didnt see a constant stream of this (either by
> accident-- SNMP
> auto discovery, or design-- lets find all the 'private' routers and
> switches out there) I would be more worried as my network
> pro
On Thu, 13 Mar 2003, McBurnett, Jim wrote:
:Will anyone answer this? I know you may not be
:able to comment due to legal concerns.. But I am curious..
I can answer, I just can't tell you who I do it for. ;) (the point
of the nickname, but I digress)
Short answer is: the larger the victim netw
At 05:19 PM 3/13/2003 -0500, McBurnett, Jim wrote:
Hello,
I am just curious about this.
I see a rather unusual # of SNMP queiries
and port scans from DSL
IP blocks in the US...
How many of you really go after the script kiddies
doing this?
I know 1, 2 or even 3 a day is not a concern for me,
but
What does unknown mean? And how can you count it if its unknown? Not being
silly, genuinely curious.
- Original Message -
From: "Sean Donelan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, March 13, 2003 9:30 PM
Subject: Re: DSL-IP Probes Curiousity.
On Thu, 13 Mar 2003, McBurnett, Jim wrote:
> I am just curious about this.
> I see a rather unusual # of SNMP queiries
> and port scans from DSL
> IP blocks in the US...
>
> How many of you really go after the script kiddies
> doing this?
>
> I know 1, 2 or even 3 a day is not a concern for me,
>
Hello,
I am just curious about this.
I see a rather unusual # of SNMP queiries
and port scans from DSL
IP blocks in the US...
How many of you really go after the script kiddies
doing this?
I know 1, 2 or even 3 a day is not a concern for me,
but when I get 3 a day from the same source IP allo