Re: bunty the expert



Come along Guyfucksup
who is you

........................Leslie


"Guy FucksUp" <fuckwit@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:Xns973291A5FA493buntythecunty@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>I don't think so, just a boring clueless fuckwit
>
>
>
> d. In cl above the Claimant means that BT owns the exchanges, owns the
> backbone between
> cities, owns the "last mile" connection from the local exchanges to the
> customers home or
> premises. Tlscali and AOL either rent rack space in a BT exchange for
> their
> own equipment, or
> rent or lease BT equipment in the exchange. If someone were to literally
> "pull the plug" on BT
> tomorrow Tlscali and AOL would also cease to operate, however If someone
> were to "pull the
> plug" on Tlscali or AOL tomorrow BT would continue to operate as normal,
> albeit with a few
> hundred thousand extra potential customers in the market for an ISP.
> e. A standard consumer or small business Internet package from as ISP
> consists of the following;
> I. Access, whether dial up or broadband, access is controlled by 'ast
> mile" location
> identification, eg phone number or specific wire circuit from the
> exchange,
> by a specific
> user name, and by a specific password. All three "tokens" must be in place
> to initiate a
> sucessful connection to the Net.
> n. DNS and DHCP services. The DNS (Domain Name Service) translates every
> single text
> request by a customer, whether it be "bbc.co.uk" or the bit after the "@"
> symbol in an
> email message, into a numeric "dotted quad" string, which is what the
> internet actually
> runs on... for example http://YoWW.google.co.uka/ctually takes you to
> 66.249.93.99 so
> simply typing those numbers into a web browser will get you the Google
> home
> page,
> name servers are used because human readable names are more user friendly
> and
> easy to remember than long strings of numbers. These numbers are also
> known
> as an
> "IP address"
> DHCP is Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol. What this means is quite
> simple really.
> Ordinary consumers and small businesses do not have an IP address
> permanently
> assigned to them.
> Think of this as telephone numbers, only big businesses have permanent
> telephone
> numbers (remember Whitehall 1212 1) everyone else is assigned a new
> temporary
> number every time they use the phone. This means you can have far more
> "phone
> users" than "phone numbers". You need to accept that for the time being
> there is a
> limited supply of IP address numbers available.
> So, Joe Public gets assigned an IP number by DHCP every time he picks up
> the
> "phone" (in this analogy) and makes a new connection. When Joe Public
> hangs
> up that
> number is released back into the "pool" so that it can be re-used, perhaps
> by John Doe.
> This sounds horribly complex, but because DNS (Domain Name Services) and
> DHCP
> work together, it is very easy, all you need to remember is the name,
> whether it be Joe
> Public, or Google.
> iii. E-mail services, you are given an email address and account, which is
> hosted on the
> email servers owned and operated by your ISP.
> iv. WWw access, you are given access to the World Wide Web, this is never
> truly a direct
> connection, but goes via more servers owned and operated by your ISP. The
> purpose
> of this is to speed up the service by proxies and cacheing (often running
> Squid) which is
> to say that instead of fetching the BBC news website every time each one
> of
> 1000 users
> requests that website, the ISP saves money and increases performance by
> getting the
> BBC news website once, and sending out 1000 copies over its own network.
> v. Usenet access, you are given access to Usenet. This is never a truly
> direct connection,
> but goes via more servers owned and operated by your ISP. Since all news
> servers are
> "peering", which means that they all continually compare notes with each
> other to
> ensure that any message that appears on Server A that does not appear on
> Server B is
> sent, or propogated, to server B, and so on around the globe.
>
>
>
> I'll be amazed if the judge doesn't ask wtf this is all about
> 18 pages of bull*** and not one mention of how bunty has proved beyond
> all
> doubt that none of the Usenet posts he's complaining about are not
> forgeries. No mention of how easy it is to forge Usenet posts. No
> mention
> of the hundreds of posts made by him through Usenetserver which cannot be
> traced back to him because Usenetserver is based in the United States. No
> mention of the hundreds of posts made by Americans taking the piss out the
> little squirt, none of which he's complained about.
> The companies bunty is harrassing with this bull*** are now reading
> everything posted in here. They might like to know that it is very easy to
> forge a Usenet post, so that it appears to come from someone, when it
> doesn't. This post appears to have come through the Shared-Secrets news
> server, when in fact, it does not. Some forgeries are so good that ISP
> abuse departments have been fooled by them and closed the accounts of
> innocent people.
> Other innocent, but stupid, people have their Usenet access hijacked by
> spammers and child pornography posters. BlueYonder had so many of it's
> customers accounts hijacked at one time, that BlueYonder was banned from
> accessing Usenet until the problem was fixed.
>
>
>


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