Tuc at T-B-O-H.NET wrote (on Fri, Aug 17, 2007 at 12:12:41PM -0400):
bmanning@vacation.karoshi.com wrote (on Fri, Aug 17, 2007 at 10:26:43AM +0000):
On Thu, Aug 16, 2007 at 03:41:35PM -0700, Jeff Shultz wrote:
leeyao@trashymail.com wrote:
Hi, I try adding google.com to my dns server to get more visitors but google.com still show search engine.
If you want a serious answer to your question, it's because your customers are not using your DNS servers to resolve queries (bully for them, I say).
The next (evil) step that you would have to take would be to intercept outbound DNS queries (or maybe just the replies, even more evil) and replace the answers with the ones you want. There are lots reasons not to do this.
The (slighty less evil, IMHO) other option would be for you to keep track of google.com's ips (not so easy, as you'll see once you try) and intercept web requests to those ips and replace them with your own.
This comes from an "Attorney and Counselor-at-Law", and without a legal disclaimer? I'm shocked.
Most electronic disclaimers aren't worth the paper they're printed upon. :-)
I'm also shocked someone would actually advocate this. I'm sure Google wouldn't be too happy to find out about it.
I kinda hoped that anyone reading the above would NOT get the impression I'm advocating this. I'm not (unless you're a country with population exceeding one billion, in which case you write your own rules. :-) -- _________________________________________ Nachman Yaakov Ziskind, FSPA, LLM awacs@ziskind.us Attorney and Counselor-at-Law http://ziskind.us Economic Group Pension Services http://egps.com Actuaries and Employee Benefit Consultants