mnordhoff
No user record in our sample, but mnordhoff has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but mnordhoff has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
Wait, Namecheap deactivates your domain name if you have a temporary DNS outage?
You should email them about the form and about your domain. Their email address is listed on the website. <https://quad9.net/support/contact/> Sometimes the upstream blocklist provider will be easy to contact directly…
Even without "all-servers", DNSMasq will race servers frequently (after 20 seconds, unless it's changed), and when retrying. A sudden outage should only affect you for a few seconds, if at all.
Unless the privacy policy changed recently, Google shouldn't be doing anything nefarious with 8.8.8.8 DNS queries.
This sounds like a very serious security vulnerability...?
Wellp. Incident report: "We posted our first incident report to Cloud Service Health about ~1h after the start of the crashes, due to the Cloud Service Health infrastructure being down due to this outage."
Related: <https://www.sprint.net/>'s IP address was 2600:: for many years, but they sadly started using a DDoS mitigation service with different IPs.
Is collecting a shipping address because PayPal's JavaScript is broken legal under the GDPR?
In 2011, Gmail accidentally some people's email and restored it from tape. https://gmail.googleblog.com/2011/02/gmail-back-soon-for-eve...
Maybe not the entire region. Amazon was reportedly building a data center complex next to the natural gas Hermiston Generating Plant some distance from the river.
I have bad news for you, Linode's authoritative DNS service also uses Cloudflare DNS Firewall. $ dig +short ns1.digitalocean.com aaaa 2400:cb00:2049:1::adf5:3a33 $ dig +short ns1.linode.com aaaa…
As I understood it, the difference between the $2.50 and $3.50 Vultr VPSes is an IPv4 address. I don't know why that page doesn't explain. Maybe it's changed.
This has a couple bugs: 1.1.1.2 and 1.1.1.3 both return the SVCB records for 1.1.1.1. (I don't know if clients would ignore them, or actually switch to 1.1.1.1.) Non-SVCB-type queries for _dns.resolver.arpa return…
They moved data centers (to Hurricane Electric Fremont 2). It's not unusually unreliable.
Yup. I'm still upset (but not angry) about https://status.linode.com/incidents/kqhypy8v5cm8.
Or if you open the EC2 console (it's up this time!) and scroll down to the bottom. https://console.aws.amazon.com/ec2/v2/home?region=us-east-1#...: (Edit: I hope I didn't sound sarcastic. I don't open random console…
Amazon seems to have stopped randomizing them in newer regions. Another reason to move to us-east-2. ;-)
Resolvers typically cache successful "does not exist" responses for no more than 1-3 hours. (And authoritative servers often have a lower negative TTL.) (There's a corner case related to DNSSEC that can make it go…
No idea. I'd speculate that it's some kind of historical reasons from before FB acquired IG.
"Because of this Cloudflare’s 1.1.1.1 DNS resolver could no longer respond to queries asking for the IP address of facebook.com or instagram.com." The instagram.com zone itself uses a third-party DNS service and didn't…
"While Cloudflare signs all of its BGP routes with RPKI..." That's not correct. https://rpki.cloudflare.com/?view=bgp&asn=13335 itself says Cloudflare still doesn't sign 12% of them.
They shouldn't lose sleep over it, though.
Who sent them first, and why?
Instead of going from relying on a single provider to relying on a single provider, you could use both AWS and Azure.
DigitalOcean has /32s from ARIN and RIPE. (And a /48 from APNIC???) (Edit: And a /36, /40 and /48 from APNIC?)