Wait a minute...you need to own the ip block to blacklist it? Isn't that kind of counterintuitive and illogical? I can understand an ISP maybe doing it..but if they knew they have dynamic IP's ... That just makes no sense. Take care, Sina No trees were destroyed in sending this message; however, a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced. -----Original Message----- From: speakup-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:speakup-bounces at braille.uwo.ca] On Behalf Of Gregory Nowak Sent: Monday, June 21, 2004 4:51 PM To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux. Subject: Re: reporting dictionary attacks -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 As far as I know, you need to be the owner of the IP block, in order to black list it, and the request has to originate from that IP block. Greg On Mon, Jun 21, 2004 at 01:59:29PM -0600, Joseph C. Lininger wrote: > > You could blacklist the IP address if it isn't being spoofed. > --- > Joseph C. Lininger > jbahm at pcdesk.net > note, the following is used for automated processing. Please leave in > tact > if quoting me in a reply. > Verification: 5eab38a77ac40416e075be8f50607ff7 - -- Free domains: http://www.eu.org/ or mail dns-manager at EU.org -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.3 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFA10pB7s9z/XlyUyARAhV/AJ90wQHJCJ0RknC7WXC6UKVvOU5dLQCgoQLM dWYClI8VjnHjqS59dvqu2Tc= =sajb -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Speakup mailing list Speakup at braille.uwo.ca http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup