Foreign address 50.56.84.181 (Mystery resolved)
- rackerhacker
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Sat 04 Aug 2012, 20:21
- Contact:
I'm Major Hayden and I operate icanhazip.com. The purpose of the site is to allow people to find their external IPv4/IPv6 address with zero advertisements, cookies, or tracking of any kind. I work for a pretty large hosting company and I'm able to provide the service to people free of charge.
It sounds like Puppy Linux has been updated to query my site to figure out the external IP address of machines running Puppy Linux. I didn't make that change and I didn't have any input on the change.
With that said, I have absolutely no issues with Puppy Linux using my site and I welcome any other questions or comments you have about icanhazip.com.
As an aside, you should know that:
It sounds like Puppy Linux has been updated to query my site to figure out the external IP address of machines running Puppy Linux. I didn't make that change and I didn't have any input on the change.
With that said, I have absolutely no issues with Puppy Linux using my site and I welcome any other questions or comments you have about icanhazip.com.
As an aside, you should know that:
- neither of my parents have Hayden as their last name
- I have zero affiliations with any government agencies (I work for a large hosting provider)
- I welcome any comments or questions that you have
- rackerhacker
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Sat 04 Aug 2012, 20:21
- Contact:
Google Alerts.Eldon wrote:Haha!
Seeing as you've only joined today and made 3 posts on the forum, I can't help but wonder how you got here.
Were your ears burning?
Or did your CIA pals tip you off that your cover was blown?
If you care about your own personal security and the credibility of your reputation, you really ought to set up Google Alerts for your full name and any forum/IRC/IM handles that you regularly use. It helps you find forum threads like these which exist to drag your name through the mud.
Thanks for dropping in rackerhacker to put the record straight and your more detailed reply at http://rackerhacker.com/2012/08/04/priv ... hazip-com/ . Be assured that the Puppy community is not made up entirely of paranoid conspiracy theorists.
Your link to the Onion should keep them happy for a while :
http://www.theonion.com/video/cias-face ... cos,19753/
Your link to the Onion should keep them happy for a while :
http://www.theonion.com/video/cias-face ... cos,19753/
[b]Classic Opera 12.16 browser SFS package[/b] for Precise, Slacko, Racy, Wary, Lucid, etc available[url=http://terryphillips.org.uk/operasfs.htm]here[/url] :)
- rackerhacker
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Sat 04 Aug 2012, 20:21
- Contact:
I figured as much.Terryphi wrote:Thanks for dropping in rackerhacker to put the record straight and your more detailed reply at http://rackerhacker.com/2012/08/04/priv ... hazip-com/ . Be assured that the Puppy community is not made up entirely of paranoid conspiracy theorists.
The scariest thing about that video is that it could easily be true.Terryphi wrote:Your link to the Onion should keep them happy for a while:
http://www.theonion.com/video/cias-face ... cos,19753/
Google Alerts- so it was the NSA.rackerhacker wrote: The scariest thing about that video is that it could easily be true.
Actually, the scariest thing is that it IS true.
I happen to know a guy that does background checks on people that apply for government jobs. He has a badge and everything.
He admits that 80% of his job is just looking at their facebook page. Seriously.
Every time you google something or publish something, the web is indexing real stuff; from the flow of merchandise to political gatherings and all sorts of social and behavioral data.
You are essentially providing information that is most useful to those that would attack or enslave you, rather than protect you. Even if they just know demographics, they know how the herd responds, and it allows them to manipulate and herd you in many ways.
For instance, they can predict how people respond to a message, and tailor it so you respond favorably. So instead of talking about how we inflict "cruel and unusual punishment" which is clearly illegal, they debate whether or not it's torture, to keep you from demanding the law be upheld regardless of international law against torture.
http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewto ... 7&start=15
Noticed it on the mele version, contacted host provider and was rudely rejected this IP is covered by some security protocol and you can't even complain, May do so in person, this host HQ is local to me!
Noticed it on the mele version, contacted host provider and was rudely rejected this IP is covered by some security protocol and you can't even complain, May do so in person, this host HQ is local to me!
Well that's not surprising. I mean, the hosting provider is probably doing their job by not disclosing stuff about customers. "MajorHayden" of rackerhacker is here in Texas.
As has been stated on other threads, Puppy has been built with networking stuff that pings his site to confirm that your connection is working. It just stays connected- but doesn't seem to transfer much of anything afaik.
As has been stated on other threads, Puppy has been built with networking stuff that pings his site to confirm that your connection is working. It just stays connected- but doesn't seem to transfer much of anything afaik.
Would it be possible to get easy in control of Puppy Linux, given there is not set a strong password and uses the default live or even installing it?
Assuming that users never MAKES a strong password for the root account.
Its not given any advice on this as seems to be important in other distroes, whereas one usually sets a passwords at during installation.
Should setting a password been a part of the first boot window in order to protect your computer more safe?
Or asked another way... Can this "foreign address" somehow connect to your computer if your IP address is of a list of interest?
That said... I do not take a stand on this specific address 50.56.84.181, but more in general...
Assuming that users never MAKES a strong password for the root account.
Its not given any advice on this as seems to be important in other distroes, whereas one usually sets a passwords at during installation.
Should setting a password been a part of the first boot window in order to protect your computer more safe?
Or asked another way... Can this "foreign address" somehow connect to your computer if your IP address is of a list of interest?
That said... I do not take a stand on this specific address 50.56.84.181, but more in general...
Hi micko, your comment implies that the ipinfo file is readable as a text file but on pemasus upup raring 3992 the file is not readable. (It has the same sort of icon as something like libflashplayer.so does...). Were you implying I could just remove the ipinfo file and the problem will go away?01micko wrote:see /usr/sbin/ipinfo
This has been discussed many times. If you don't like it remove it.
And isnt ipinfo the actual script that displays the connection info? If I were to remove that file how would I know what connections were being made? Is there another way?
It is readable/writable on all puppies - just right-click and open it as text. Remove/comment out the offending line (#23):greengeek wrote:but on pemasus upup raring 3992 the file is not readable
Code: Select all
var0="`wget -O - -q icanhazip.com`"
Ooops, my bad. I didn't look closely enough. I was looking at lpinfo, not Ipinfoanikin wrote: It is readable/writable on all puppies
Thanks!
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