[72885] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: Convention networks and viruses
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Scott Weeks)
Thu Jul 29 20:18:37 2004
Date: Thu, 29 Jul 2004 14:17:58 -1000 (HST)
From: Scott Weeks <surfer@mauigateway.com>
To: nanog@merit.edu
In-Reply-To: <20040729035444.H86242-100000@www.mauigateway.com>
Errors-To: owner-nanog-outgoing@merit.edu
Good Afternoon!
I'd like to apologize for the inconsiderate statement I made this morning.
It was unecessary and uncalled for. I should've said it like Eric
Gauthier and Petri Helenius did. Nicely.
I deal with these things everyday on my network and was just shocked that
any part of a network would be purposely shutdown for an hour and a half
to solve an issue that simple operational (rate-limiting, MRTG, etc, etc)
practices would've prevented. That is, if the article was even accurate.
It was uncalled for and I apologize to the list members.
scott
On Thu, 29 Jul 2004, Scott Weeks wrote:
: On Thu, 29 Jul 2004, Sean Donelan wrote:
:
: : As NANOG has experienced during the last several meetings, in any network
: : used by a large number of people, there will be a certain percentage of
: : people which bring infected computers into the network.
: :
: : http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/29/technology/circuits/29bost.html?pagewanted=3
: : Wiring a Convention, Version 2004
: : By SETH SCHIESEL
: : Published: July 29, 2004
: : [...]
: : But data services have not been as solid. Many news organizations
: : suffered intermittent breakdowns in Internet service, and on Tuesday
: : evening the main press pavilion was offline for about 90 minutes. A
: : spokesman for Verizon said the company deliberately caused the
: : interruption as part of an effort to root out a more deep-seated
: : network problem, which the company said appeared to have been caused by
: : a virus carried by network devices provided by news organizations. In
: : the interim, a handful of data lines provided by other companies,
: : including AT&T, served as a backup.
:
:
:
: A buncha technically clueless newsgeeks brought infected micro$loth
: computers into a convention? Shocking! What's this world coming to???
: Sounds like Verizon hired low-end netgeeks if they had to bring the
: network down to find these infected computers.
:
: tisk-tisk-tisk Verizon. MCSE != good netgeek In fact, almost all the
: time, the two are mutually exclusive, disjoint sets of people...
:
: :-)
: scott
:
: