On 6 Jul 2000, Sean Donelan wrote:
tin.it obviously fits all 3 criteria and thus would be blackholed. it might not get them to change their behaviour, but at least people who subscribe to the blackhole list wouldnt be rooted by tin.it customers While this might seem to be a belt and suspenders approach, anyone who cares about their machines being rooted spends their time securing
On Thu, 6 Jul 2000, Dan Hollis wrote: their machines. After securing your machines, RBL'ing tin.it is just extra work. On the other hand, RBLing tin.it is of limited prophylactic value since, if you haven't secured your machines, the script kiddies will just root your machine from elsewhere.
A neat trick if you actually directly control all the machines in your network. If you dont, then a scriptkiddie blackhole list does help. Can you think of any good reason to continue accepting tin.it packets? I cant. Just because its not a perfect solution doesnt mean it doesnt have any value whatsoever. And if tin.it suddenly is unable to reach some portion of the internet due to blackholing, they might actually bother to do something. (well, we can hope.) -Dan