chez  ·   jad   ·  tsurc   ·  cat   ·  tarquin  ·  cryptoboy Weird People    
journal.terryfroy.com
PhotosWritings
 
admin

post to journal
edit journal entry

archives

june 2004
july 2004
august 2004
september 2004
october 2004
december 2004
  january 2005
february 2005
may 2005
june 2005
november 2005
  january 2006
february 2006
april 2006
may 2006
july 2006
august 2006
september 2006
october 2006
november 2006
  february 2007
april 2007
may 2007
june 2007
july 2007
august 2007
september 2007
october 2007
november 2007
december 2007
  january 2008
march 2008
april 2008
july 2008
november 2008
december 2008
  march 2009
july 2009
august 2009
september 2009
october 2009
november 2009
december 2009
  january 2010
march 2010
may 2010
august 2010
november 2010
  march 2013

contact me

e-mail [pgp key]
homepage
icq

daily news

bbc radio 1
bbc news worldwide

fun stuff

ntk
fuckedcompany.com
bofh archives
the onion

internet oracles

google [usenet]

pc entertainment

c64 radio
project ay
world of spectrum
mame [unix] [wip]
id software
unreal tournament

network stuff

iana
6bone
rfc editor
arin whois
apnic whois
ripe whois

essential software

fedora core
courier mta
pureftpd
user mode linux

seo fun

uk tv abroad
live uk tv
website design lincolnshire
sticky labels

 
Wednesday, December 24, 2008

... and they are out!
(posted at 08:53PM GMT)

Just a follow-up to the Tiscali saga detailed in my last few posts.

The aforementioned customer migrated in to us and all their routing problems have mysteriously vanished; they can see all their other sites, they can see Google and more importantly for them, they can see Facebook.

(don't ask!)

... and surprise surprise... they actually get the full maximum speed from their ADSL line when they didn't before.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Another strike against Tiscali...
(posted at 06:15PM GMT)

A few things they won't tell you when you sign up for Tiscali Broadband service; firstly, they have two technical support teams - one that handles support via e-mail and one that handles support via telephone.

Both are as equally incompetent as each other.
Both have totally separate ticket systems and the staff manning one do not have access to the other.

The long and the short of it was that I had to explain to the individual on the other end of the phone the entirety of what had gone on a month ago when this was initially reported (see my past journal entry on this topic).

I was then asked why I was submitting traceroutes.

I responded by saying that this is standard practice when reporting an issue with a providers' routing and that I would expect my own customers to do the same.

The individual then responded, "A traceroute is the last thing you need to test - have you checked to make sure your browser is configured correctly ?"

My mouth fell wide open at this.

In order for a browser to connect to a webserver, there must be stable routing between the users' computer and the network where the server resides - which is exactly what a traceroute provides evidence of.

In short, if a traceroute doesn't get there (port filtering notwithstanding), a browser definitely won't.

I said that the customers' browser was a clean install of Mozilla Firefox but regardless of that, I was told to set the browser security settings as low as possible (you can't do this in Firefox - only in IE) - this at least explains why I see several thousand rogue connections from machines in the Tiscali ADSL pool every day; if this is the advice their techs are kicking out, it would certainly explain the amount of compromised machines out there in Tiscali-land.

I was asked if I had disabled the antivirus/firewall on the computer to which I responded, "What antivirus ?" (this is Linux after all) and "What firewall ?" (no iptables loaded - so no firewall - no services listening either bar sshd).

I said that the machine wasn't running Windows but I could replicate the problem on a Windows machine if requested.

I asked to be escalated to second-line support but was refused as I had not yet proved that the issue could not be resolved by first-line support (i.e. by this individual).

I retorted by saying that if you do not understand the nature of the problem which this connection is experiencing, how the hell can you expect to solve it ?

The individual then said that a traceroute won't work between two Tiscali Broadband connections unless I am using a VPN connection; thankfully my 'hold' button was within reach as I was both hysterical and insanely angry at this point.

I can only end this how dwmw2 usually ends his BT-related rants:

 
slashdot

Court Upholds New York Law That Says ISPs Must Offer $15 Broadband

Fake Job Interviews Target Developers With New Python Backdoor

IRS Free Tax Filing Pilot Saved Consumers $5.6 Million In Prep Fees

45 Drives Adds Linux-Powered Mini PCs, Workstations To Growing Compute Lineup

Thoma Bravo To Take UK Cybersecurity Company Darktrace Private In $5 Billion Deal

Judge Dismisses Superconductivity Physicist's Lawsuit Against University

British Intelligence Moves To Protect Research Universities From Espionage

Noise From Traffic Stunts Growth of Baby Birds, Study Finds

Millions of IPs Remain Infected By USB Worm Years After Its Creators Left It For Dead

Captchas Are Getting Harder

GNOME Foundation To Focus On Fundraising After Years Running A Deficit

Chinese Drone Maker DJI Might Get Banned Next in the US

Android TVs Can Expose User Email Inboxes

Europeans 'Less Hard-Working' Than Americans, Says Norway Oil Fund Boss

Encrypted Email Service Files DMA Complaint Claiming It Vanished from Google Search

the register

Big Cloud is still making bank – Is this AI adoption, price rises, or what?

Ex-Space Shuttle boss corrects the record on Hubble upgrade mission

Jensen Huang and Sam Altman among tech chiefs invited to federal AI Safety Board

ASML caves to US pressure to cease servicing some kit used by Chinese customers

Microsoft dusts off ancient MS-DOS 4.0 code for release on GitHub

Two indicted for 'illegally exporting' chip gear from US to China

Kaiser Permanente handed over 13.4M people's data to Microsoft, Google, others

Amazon to ditch WorkDocs sharing service, support countdown begins

Huawei and pals reportedly plan to produce high bandwidth memory by 2026

Second time lucky for Thoma Bravo, which scoops up Darktrace for $5.3B

The eight-bit Z80 is dead. Long live the 16-bit Z80!

Encrypted email service files DMA complaint claiming it vanished from Google Search

TikTok ban could escalate US-China trade war, ex-White House CIO tells The Reg

UK's Investigatory Powers Bill to become law despite tech world opposition

45 Drives adds Linux-powered mini PCs, workstations to growing compute lineup

IBM and LzLabs to clash in UK court over Software Defined Mainframe

UK agriculture department slammed for paper pushing despite tech splurges

Help! My mouse climbed a wall and now it doesn't work right

VMware’s end-user compute community told to brace for ‘Omnissa’ shift

Flaws in Chinese keyboard apps leave 750 million users open to snooping, researchers claim

Atlassian loses half its CEOs, but customers stay solid after Server products exit support

Intel excited by PC sales pop and GPU prospects, but investors aren’t because the outlook is poor

What's up with Alphabet and Microsoft lately? Profits, sales – and AI costs

Amazon to blow $11B on cluster of Indiana bit barns

Cops cuff man for allegedly framing colleague with AI-generated hate speech clip

Ring dinged for $5.6M after, among other claims, rogue insider spied on 'pretty girls'

ByteDance 'would rather' torpedo TikTok than sell it off

FCC votes 3-2 to bring net neutrality back from the dead

Detecting drift and dealing with the Silicon Valley mindset

Two cuffed in Samourai Wallet crypto dirty money sting

TSMC says first 1.6nm chips coming in 2026

Spotify claims Apple wants 'tax' for in-app pricing tweak

DARPA's latest toy is a 20-foot, 12-ton tank that drives itself

City council audit trail is an audit fail after disastrous Oracle ERP rollout

SK hynix breaks Q1 revenue records on back of AI boom

Russia, Iran pose most aggressive threat to 2024 elections, say infoseccers

Meta's value plummets as Zuckerberg admits AI needs more time and money

Atos hopes for lifeline as refinancing saga set to drag on into May

Japan's Moon lander makes it through another lunar night

Turns out teaching criminals to write web code keeps them out of prison

Throwflame launches fire-spitting robo-dog from Hell

Microsoft and Amazon's AI ambitions spark regulatory rumble

BMW calls for vendor openness in quest to mine its own processes

Forget the AI doom and hype, let's make computers useful

Indian bank’s IT is so shabby it’s been banned from opening new accounts

Samsung shows off battery tech it says will see you gone in nine minutes

IBM to acquire Hashi for $6.4B, hopes it will boost software biz and Red Hat

Australia’s spies and cops want ‘accountable encryption’ - aka access to backdoors

Governments issue alerts after 'sophisticated' state-backed actor found exploiting flaws in Cisco security boxes

With Run:ai acquisition, Nvidia aims to manage your AI kubes

 

Linux

Apache

PHP