DSL & Privacy 4
Ant sends a Wired story about DSL subscribers whose company set up their IP's to reverse to their full names - ostensibly to prove that the company needed more IP addresses. I'm not sure that the Wired author is on the ball for part of his story; it's not really very likely that anyone is going to target junkmail based on your third-level domain name unless the practice becomes terribly widespread. But certainly it makes the user's name available in any circumstance where the IP is normally exposed, which can't be a good idea. This is a specific case that relates to the more general set of naming exposing information about your network topology. -- michael
NEEDED to assign customer names to numbers? (Score:2)
- The Boston Lunatic
xDSL and dynamic IP addresses (Score:1)
"No servers" (Score:1)
I shudder to think of all the people who don't have sufficient competition in their area yet, and have no choice but to go with a provider who enforces these asinine, destructive rules. Some choice -- sit around waiting to get screwed, or try to protect yourself and hope the provider doesn't notice and cancel your account. I'd go with the second, and go all the way to the top demanding an explanation; at least it's more palatable than the alternative of getting cracked.