On Jan 19, 2012, at 5:41 PM, Ryan Gelobter wrote:
The megaupload.com domain was seized today, has anyone noticed significant drops in network traffic as a result?
http://www.scribd.com/doc/78786408/Mega-Indictment http://techland.time.com/2012/01/19/feds-shut-down-megaupload-com-file-shari...
------------ derek@derekivey.com wrote: -------------- From: Derek Ivey <derek@derekivey.com> Interesting… it looks like they seized the servers and didn't touch DNS. -bash-3.00$ nslookup megaupload.com Non-authoritative answer: Name: megaupload.com Address: 174.140.154.22 Name: megaupload.com Address: 174.140.154.23 Name: megaupload.com Address: 174.140.154.24 Name: megaupload.com Address: 174.140.154.20 Name: megaupload.com Address: 174.140.154.21 DNS still points to Mega Upload's IPs. --------------------------------------------------------------- Collecting client IP addresses to send notices to? >;-) I notice other IPs in the range ( for example, .223 and .123) say the same thing about UDP/53. scott ku# nmap -P0 -sU -p U:53 174.140.154.22 PORT STATE SERVICE 53/udp open|filtered domain ku# nmap -P0 -sU -p U:53 174.140.154.21 PORT STATE SERVICE 53/udp open|filtered domain ku# nmap -P0 -sU -p U:53 174.140.154.20 PORT STATE SERVICE 53/udp open|filtered domain ku# nmap -P0 -sU -p U:53 174.140.154.223 PORT STATE SERVICE 53/udp open|filtered domain ku# nmap -P0 -sU -p U:53 174.140.154.123 PORT STATE SERVICE 53/udp open|filtered domain ku# nmap -P0 -A 174.140.154.20 All 1000 scanned ports on 174.140.154.20 are filtered Too many fingerprints match this host to give specific OS details