Special Counsel Office report web site

Martin Hannigan hannigan at gmail.com
Thu Apr 18 04:11:37 UTC 2019


Check the nANOG archives for examples of whitehouse.gov, cia.gov etc. It
certainly is.



On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 23:34 <mike.lyon at gmail.com> wrote:

> Isn’t this why god invented CDNs? Though, i doubt the govment is
> Akamized...
>
> -Mike
>
> On Apr 17, 2019, at 20:26, Mark Seiden <mis at seiden.com> wrote:
>
> of course p2p is the way to distribute this but i doubt the justice
> department can admit there is any positive legitimate use for p2p.
>
> (i’ve been surprised that it hasn’t made it to wikileaks or bittorrent
> yet.  “russiar, are you listening?”)
>
> (i sure hope there’s a signed version or at least a hash.)
>
> i predict there will be versions with fake content, missing content, and
> malware inserted that are distributed as well.
>
>
>
>
> and i’ll bet there will be some infected pdf version as well distributed
> that way.
> On Apr 17, 2019, 7:57 PM -0700, fwessling--- via NANOG <nanog at nanog.org>,
> wrote:
>
> And we may still see the web stack being the ultimate cause of the delay.
>
>
> Parkinson's law always comes to the rescue:-)
> More faster and efficient processing architecture, Hyper transport buses,
> amd-64 Branch prediction.
> Massively faster storage subsystems and disk arrays, SSD slab caching for
> hypervisors
>
> And some dude with a AJAX framework to serve a PDF bringging the whole
> thing to a a screeching halt
>
> On April 17, 2019 10:35:29 PM EDT, Sean Donelan <sean at donelan.com> wrote:
>
> On Wed, 17 Apr 2019, Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
>
> Things will probably be easier this time. The Internet has evolved
>
> ways
>
> of dealing with exactly this problem. (Avi used to call it “slash-dot
>
>
> insurance”, but the idea is the same.) Specifically:
>
>
> Yep, it will be interesting to see where the chokepoints are tommorrow.
>
> In 1998, the bandwidth pipes never filled up. The chokepoint was in the
>
> TCP and Web stacks. Eventually the Associated Press got a copy of the
> Starr Report on a CD from a congressional staffer. The press intern
> running down the street holding a CD was faster than 1998 internet :-)
>
> We were also lucky in 1998, no one had thought of DDOS yet.
>
>
> Frederick Wessling (CIO)
> Succinct Systems LLC
> Cell: +1(561) 571-2799
> Office: +1(904) 758-9915 ext. 9925
> Fax: +1(904) 758-9987
> www.SuccinctSystems.com
>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.nanog.org/pipermail/nanog/attachments/20190418/e417d285/attachment.html>


More information about the NANOG mailing list