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Chris Cason <del### [at] deletethistoo povray org> wrote:
> no IP addresses needed to change: our host only had to alter the appropriate BGP
announcement to indicate the new rou
te to/from our network.
No idea how this actually all works.
Is there some sort of BGP / website proxy thing that can serve as a functional
workaround?
> outgoing traffic that needs to pass through Comcast is black-holed only four hops
from our server. This means anyone
who is behind Comcast addresses are unable to access anything on our server.
>
> We have used our class C network for more than a quarter of a century
1. I can (usually) use the website without issue from my primary desk at work.
However; when I move to the desk on the other side of the office (literally in
the same tiny room, maybe 6 feet away) I get the infinite spinny thing and no
connection.
2. Does the newsreader still work for everyone? Thunderbird?
3. I have noticed that a lot of services are causing problems for people who use
older browsers. When I am trying to read email or do other things outside of
home, the service "flags" my connection as suspicious, since it can't identify
my browser, or when it does, it associates "older browser" with some sort of
potential bot attack.
- BE
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