On Dec 19, 2010, at 8:06 AM, Joe Greco wrote:
On 12/18/2010 5:15 PM, Marshall Eubanks wrote:
I get nothing from wikileaks.org, although the DNS is active :
$ host wikileaks.org wikileaks.org has address 64.64.12.170
Doesn't it seem vaguely suspicious that whois was just updated?
Domain ID:D130035267-LROR Domain Name:WIKILEAKS.ORG Created On:04-Oct-2006 05:54:19 UTC Last Updated On:17-Dec-2010 01:57:59 UTC Expiration Date:04-Oct-2018 05:54:19 UTC
It seems like it'd be reasonable to be cautious.
Yes. Now, for me, wikileaks.org does alias to wikileaks.info wget -r wikileaks.org --13:49:00-- http://wikileaks.org/ => `wikileaks.org/index.html' Resolving wikileaks.org... done. Connecting to wikileaks.org[64.64.12.170]:80... connected. HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 302 Found Location: http://mirror.wikileaks.info/ [following] --13:49:00-- http://mirror.wikileaks.info/ => `mirror.wikileaks.info/index.html' Resolving mirror.wikileaks.info... done. Connecting to mirror.wikileaks.info[92.241.190.202]:80... connected. HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK Length: 90,059 [text/html] Which, according to RIPE is assigned to Russia, but with a contact in Panama % Information related to '92.241.190.0 - 92.241.190.255' inetnum: 92.241.190.0 - 92.241.190.255 netname: HEIHACHI descr: Heihachi Ltd country: RU admin-c: HEI668-RIPE tech-c: HEI668-RIPE status: ASSIGNED PA mnt-by: RU-WEBALTA-MNT source: RIPE # Filtered person: Andreas Mueller address: Bella Vista, Calle 53, Marbella address: Ciudad de Panama, Panama remarks: Visit us under gigalinknetwork.com remarks: ICQ 7979970 remarks: Dedicated Servers, Webspace, VPS, DDOS protected Webspace remarks: Send abuse ONLY to: abuse@gigalinknetwork.com remarks: Technical and sales info: support@gigalinknetwork.com phone: +5078321458 abuse-mailbox: abuse@gigalinknetwork.com nic-hdl: hei668-RIPE mnt-by: WEBALTA-MNT source: RIPE # Filtered neither of which would give me confidence. Regards Marshall
... JG -- Joe Greco - sol.net Network Services - Milwaukee, WI - http://www.sol.net "We call it the 'one bite at the apple' rule. Give me one chance [and] then I won't contact you again." - Direct Marketing Ass'n position on e-mail spam(CNN) With 24 million small businesses in the US alone, that's way too many apples.