qweef - when you've finished spanking it hard, have you actually joined this site for a reason, or are you just a troll
What, is this idiot still here ? Man, you know so much about nerds, one would almost suspect you ARE a nerd. Hell, from what i've seen so far, you know so much about the subject, i'd go out on a limb and state you're the KING of nerds.
Ireland Ireland Come on! You know that most people on here won't understand that picture... Most nerds only recognize ASCII, binary, and hex. Fortunately they have programs that will convert an image to hex. Anyway let me make one thing clear. I am a LADIES MAN! I am no nerd! At school all the girls want me. No lie! I have a very involved social life, and the girls just can't resist the qweef juice. Edit: I guess they will understand the picture(because how else could they play World of Warcraft) but they perfer to view it in hex.
the idiots are sure coming out of the wood work today.. when they show up gave them this book..as they sure will need it..
I think it's a full moon. Clients will all be crazy tomorrow. Fortunately, I'm only working one day this week. I'm going to new england to visit my dad. He sent me $20.00 in the mail. He does that whenever he thinks I'm too poor to leave Philly for a visit LOL!
Moon was just full a couple of days ago. Is there a limit to how many times a person can come back with a different name with the same IP address?? You do realize this doofus is having as much fun with us as we are slamming him? This could go on, ad infinitum, if there is no limit.LMFAO!
AD have never actually performed a full-on IP block. in this case, though, i think it might be worth it.
a better way is to ban someone is to ban e-mail address... as they will soon get tired of getting new accounts for e-mail and setting up an account here..
i thought they were banned from that email address forever anyway? excuse my ignorance, as thus far i've avoided being banned.
we use e-mail banning on my site..believe me they get tire of setting up new e-mail accounts..... a reminder Why IP banning is useless 10 Feb 2004 Many proposals for eliminating comment spam are focused on banning or throttling comments from the IP address of the spammer. This is fundamentally flawed because it assumes IP addresses are both unique and hard to come by. Banning an IP address can have severe consequences. Many ISPs (including AOL) and companies use a proxy server that makes it appear as if all users are coming from a single (or a handful) if IP addresses. By blocking an IP address, you might be preventing a substantial portion of AOL users from commenting. Depending on your point of view, eliminating AOL may not be a great loss; however the same thing would happen to millions of users behind other proxy servers. The other problem is that IP addresses are very easy to get or fake for spammers who care about such things. There are hundreds of thousands of open proxies that will let anyone direct Web traffic through them. When I’m using an open proxy, my IP address is effectively masked. And I can use simple software to switch to a different open proxy (and thus a different IP address) every few minutes. So my spamming activity isn’t tied to a specific IP address. Hypothetically speaking, if the problem of open proxies were to disappear overnight, there are two other mechanisms that provide a limitless set of IP addresses to spammers: dialup and spoofing. Most dialup ISPs provide a different IP address each time you dial in. If a spammer were to find that their IP address had been banned, they could simply disconnect and redial. It would be trivial to automate the process of dialing in, spamming, disconnecting, and dialing back in. IP addresses are easy to fake as well. The design principles of TCP/IP allows the sender of a packet to specify its IP address. The message will still be routed to its destination using the fake origin address. Return packets would be mis-routed, however, because TCP/IP would send responses to the true location of the IP address rather than where it actually came from. This means that IP spoofing is ineffective in situations where you need to interact with a remote server, but very effective in a one-way conversation. I can’t retrieve a Web page using a spoofed IP address because I need to make the request and then have the server send me the page. But I can send requests all day long if I don’t care about the response.