I was under the impression that the term was coined at MIT in the model railroad club. http://tmrc.mit.edu/hackers-ref.html
Wouldn't it be trivial to perform some sort of analysis on this? That is, write a script to test an appropriately sized sample for domain availability. Then after some predetermined time, check the availability again.…
You could just crowd source it. When you quickly back out of a page from Google, it offers to "Block all Pages from somedomain.com". This could easily be repurposed to also garner additional details about the site.
I highly doubt anything would come of it. If it did, it would be pretty easy to explain. Nonetheless, having .xxx traffic originating from you on a work computer is not a situation i'd care to have to explain.
Wish I would have checked the domain before clicking on it at work. While the content was interesting, content doesn't transfer well to access logs.
I was under the impression that the term was coined at MIT in the model railroad club. http://tmrc.mit.edu/hackers-ref.html
Wouldn't it be trivial to perform some sort of analysis on this? That is, write a script to test an appropriately sized sample for domain availability. Then after some predetermined time, check the availability again.…
You could just crowd source it. When you quickly back out of a page from Google, it offers to "Block all Pages from somedomain.com". This could easily be repurposed to also garner additional details about the site.
I highly doubt anything would come of it. If it did, it would be pretty easy to explain. Nonetheless, having .xxx traffic originating from you on a work computer is not a situation i'd care to have to explain.
Wish I would have checked the domain before clicking on it at work. While the content was interesting, content doesn't transfer well to access logs.