AT&T cablemodem port blockage survey
Scott Ehrlich
se at panix.com
Mon Aug 13 16:59:41 EDT 2001
Are there any web redirection sights which act like a tzo.com, where you
can give it a URL and port number and point everyone just to the URL? If
the port number changes, the user still goes to the URL, but the site
covertly redirects the user to the new port number you specify, with the
user never knowing what happened?
This would permit port 80 blocks to take affect, and the user to change to
whatever available port you want, and incoming connections to continue
with little-to-no downtime and without knowing/caring about ports.
Scott
On Mon, 13 Aug 2001, John Chambers wrote:
> --------
>
> Here in Waltham it's blocked, too. Maybe I'll move my server to a
> higher port. As far as I know, I'm the only one using it, for testing
> a bunch of CGI ideas. That would probably also stop the silly
> attempts by advertisers to bounce GETs off the server (all of which
> are rejected, but I still get one or two an hour).
>
> | I live in Cambridge, and as of sometime this past weekend, 80 has been
> | blocked.
> |
> | Doug
> |
> | On Mon, 13 Aug 2001, David Kramer wrote:
> |
> | >
> | > So here I am with my AT&T cablemodem (ex MediaOne, ex Roadrunner), happily
> | > serving up useless web pages for all to see. I keep hearing about AT&T
> | > users who are losing port 80. I can only assume it is being done region
> | > by region.
> | >
> | > So of the AT&T users out there, if your port 80 is blocked, what area do
> | > you live in?
>
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