On Sat, 1 May 2004 20:39:50 -0700, "Securtron"
wrote:
(lots snipped, but still long.) Not much worth reading. Only some
mild taunting for his ignorance.
On Sat, 1 May 2004 19:46:26 -0700, "Securtron"
wrote:
Ha ha you think you know what my ISP is smart boy.
Gotta luv ignerent newbbies, doncha?
Sir, you have a product. You have a Web site. Can you pronounce
"Duoh"? While I, personally, do not use finger, whois, and DNS, a
site is very easy to track for anyone who knows the music to which I
only know the words.
I doubt anyone here will actually try to hack your site, as that would
be marginally illegal, though, in face of your repeated SPAM and
challenge, I'd not consider it immoral. Some may report you to eBay,
some to AOL, some to whomever.
But if you think your ISP is not easily found, I'd bet a nickel (even
a shiny new one) that someone here could have it within an hour while
hardly bothering to work at it. I won't even mention how amusing it
would be to see contact information.
You would be out a nickel and your hacker friends would find themselves one
unsuccessful and two in trouble for trying, so save the tough talk for a
newbie.
You are a newbbie. Or at least haven't learned much in however long
you've been around. I did NOT (see that? NOT) say anyone would hack
your site. I did say they could find out a lot about you. Perfectly
legally, newbbie.
Don't you know what all public information is around when you take a
Web site? Guess not. Finger, whois, and DNS information don't
require hacking and are not illegal. There's a reason for that
information being publicly available.
If your product sucks as badly as your salesmanship does, I predict a
very quick end to your business.
--
rbc:vixen,Minnow Goddess,Willow Watcher,and all that sort of thing.
Often taunted by trout.
Only a fool would refuse to believe in luck. Only a damn fool would rely on it.
http://www.visi.com/~cyli