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Forums » GoDaddy Takes SecLists.Org Offline » Question of Authority..
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« RE: GoDaddy Takes SecLists.Org Offline  

Rob
In Deo speramus, God Bless the USA
Premium
join:2001-08-25
Kendall, FL

Question of Authority..

Should GoDaddy have the power to yank domain names offline? IMO it should be the sole discretion of ICANN.
Jonbo298

join:2004-01-12
Council Bluffs, IA

Re: Question of Authority..

If it means the security of hundreds/thousands/millions of account names/password, etc...then yes, they have a right IMO.

If a big site like Google or Amazon all of a sudden posted a ton of credit card info or any kind of personal info, I'd rather have it yanked immediately in terms of taking site down temporarily until it was removed. Protecting people's security is much more important then a website losing some business.

If a site was up for days with people's personal info, alot would be ticked that the site or another site like godaddy for example didn't pull it to stop the breach of security.

Rob
In Deo speramus, God Bless the USA
Premium
join:2001-08-25
Kendall, FL
·Comcast

Re: Question of Authority..

said by Jonbo298 See Profile :

If it means the security of hundreds/thousands/millions of account names/password, etc...then yes, they have a right IMO.

If a big site like Google or Amazon all of a sudden posted a ton of credit card info or any kind of personal info, I'd rather have it yanked immediately in terms of taking site down temporarily until it was removed. Protecting people's security is much more important then a website losing some business.

If a site was up for days with people's personal info, alot would be ticked that the site or another site like godaddy for example didn't pull it to stop the breach of security.
This situation makes me think of the Spamhaus / e360insight case were the Judge awarded e360insight 11.7 Million dollars for Spamhaus's failure to appear in a U.S. Court (they aren't based in the U.S.). What if other "e360insight" come around and manage to get registrars to start yanking domain names.. it should be up to ICANN.
--
YourIP.US - It's Your IP .. and more!
rr.cx - Personal Site.. coming soon.
Jonbo298

join:2004-01-12
Council Bluffs, IA

Re: Question of Authority..

Yes but how long would it take for ICANN to temporarily yank it. I'd imagine a little longer because of having to get a 3rd comapny involved. I could be wrong but just wary when things involve waiting on another company to take action.

Rob
In Deo speramus, God Bless the USA
Premium
join:2001-08-25
Kendall, FL
·Comcast

Re: Question of Authority..

said by Jonbo298 See Profile :

Yes but how long would it take for ICANN to temporarily yank it. I'd imagine a little longer because of having to get a 3rd comapny involved. I could be wrong but just wary when things involve waiting on another company to take action.
Who is the 3rd company involved? Myspace should have done directly to ICANN, presented their case, and ICANN would have yanked it. GoDaddy is under the regulation of ICANN.
--
YourIP.US - It's Your IP .. and more!
rr.cx - Personal Site.. coming soon.
deepblackmag

join:2004-12-27
00000

Re: Question of Authority..

Godaddy has pulled similar schenanigans in the past, by killing the domain hosting the NAMESERVER a spammers domain was pointed at. Godaddy have serious ethical issues to address here, and should not be meddling in the domain name system if they are unwilling to do so in a fair and proper manner. Their current MO is simply yanking whatever they dont like for whatever reason and sending a groundless bill to the owners holding their domains hostage until they pay up so they will be permitted to transfer their domains elsewhere. This is not behavior i tolerate from a registrar, and suggest any godaddy customers to research what the company has been up to. They may be cheap, but they certainly arent to be trusted.

TKJunkMail
Enjoy the sun
Premium
join:2002-03-03
Avalon, NJ
·Sprint Mobile Broa..
·Comcast

said by Jonbo298 See Profile :

If it means the security of hundreds/thousands/millions of account names/password, etc...then yes, they have a right IMO.

If a big site like Google or Amazon all of a sudden posted a ton of credit card info or any kind of personal info, I'd rather have it yanked immediately in terms of taking site down temporarily until it was removed. Protecting people's security is much more important then a website losing some business.

If a site was up for days with people's personal info, alot would be ticked that the site or another site like godaddy for example didn't pull it to stop the breach of security.
I agree. This site's owner, like some others, defends the posting of illegally obtained userids & passwords as a necessary aid in improving security. They sound just like the scum hackers that frequent their sites.
--
--
My BLOG
My Web Page
deepblackmag

join:2004-12-27
00000

Re: Question of Authority..

Please cite the law which was violated.
jsouth
Jsouth

join:2000-12-12
Wichita, KS

Re: Question of Authority..

Ever heard of identity theft? How about facilitating identity theft?
--
Bush bashing is old. How about more solutions instead?
deepblackmag

join:2004-12-27
00000

Re: Question of Authority..

A username and password are not identity theft. try harder next time.
jsouth
Jsouth

join:2000-12-12
Wichita, KS

Re: Question of Authority..

So you wouldn't have a problem with giving me your bank account username and password? Or how about a username and password to a shopping site that stores your credit card info? Some users on myspace do use the same passwords and user names on other sites or even have personal info in their profiles. Using that info is most certainly identity theft. No matter how you try and spin that it's not.
--
Bush bashing is old. How about more solutions instead?

Nightshade
sic semper tyrannis
Premium
join:2002-05-26
Salem, OR

Re: Question of Authority..

First off anyone who uses the same passwords on different sites, or even worst yet post their personal info on unsecured myspace, or any profiles for that matter, are fools.

There is no excuse whatsoever, other than the poor excuse of ignorance and denial, to use random password generator programs such as RoboForm (The one I use) to generate random passwords on different websites that have ANY of your personal information.

You can not be too careful when securing private information on the internet. Ignorance and denial will make you a target.
--
True Happiness Must Come From Within
deepblackmag

join:2004-12-27
00000

Re: Question of Authority..

Myspace is not a banking system, it has no direct tie to anything financial or personal. I can not get your social security number from it. Stealing a myspace password is not identity theft.
jsouth
Jsouth

join:2000-12-12
Wichita, KS

Re: Question of Authority..

Yeah. Keep believing that.

ROCINANTE 2112
Original Member 007

join:1999-06-29
Hartsdale, NY
clubs:

Invasion of privacy tort:

You cannot knowingly publish private data of private individuals, especially when a reasonable person expects the data to remain secure. This overrides the First Amendment. Case closed.
--
CRUNCH THIS!
ross

join:2000-08-16
·Digizip

Re: Question of Authority..

said by ROCINANTE 2112 See Profile :

Invasion of privacy tort:

You cannot knowingly publish private data of private individuals, especially when a reasonable person expects the data to remain secure. This overrides the First Amendment. Case closed.
Bullshit, plain and simple.

ROCINANTE 2112
Original Member 007

join:1999-06-29
Hartsdale, NY
clubs:

1 edit

Re: Question of Authority..

It's the law; go look it up. Anyone who has majored in business has taken at least two law classes and would know this.
--
CRUNCH THIS!

PhoenixDown
-- Wants FIOS
Premium
join:2003-06-08
Fresh Meadows, NY
clubs:

The problem is that these companies are not properly securing the information in the first place... the info has already been compromised and this is more a damage control PR ploy than anything.
--
Mass Transit Sucks!

pipdipchip
8 Megabits A Second
Premium
join:2003-12-04
Hanover, MN

said by Jonbo298 See Profile :

If it means the security of hundreds/thousands/millions of account names/password, etc...then yes, they have a right IMO.
We are talking about MySpace passwords. Not bank account passwords or something. Not really a huge deal.

In a perfect should GoDaddy have the right? Maybe. But the fact of the matter is, the domain owner has a right to explain his side of the story. Is posting MySpace passwords illegal? It would be a hard case. If he didn't break the law, what did they do wrong to have their domain taken?

In my opinion, taking a domain (which is property), should be the last last possible option and should be court ordered.
--
Webmaster of WRT54G.net - Official Microsoft MVP Longhorn Beta Tester

elios

join:2005-11-15
Springfield, MO
·Mediacom

Re: Question of Authority..

yes and think of the intelligence of the people that USE myspace
since it uses your e-mail as your logon i bet thay use the same pass for every thing its not a far leap to try it

some myspace logons and passes got out on 4chans /b/(random) board a bit back and some people on there did some realy not nice stuff like getting in to these peoples e-mail accounts then sending out suicide notes to every one in there address books
deepblackmag

join:2004-12-27
00000

Re: Question of Authority..

SHHH! The first rule of /b/ is YOU DO NOT TALK ABOUT /b/!

sporkme
drop the crantini and move it, sister
Premium,MVM
join:2000-07-01
Morristown, NJ
·Optimum Online

said by elios See Profile :

some myspace logons and passes got out on 4chans /b/(random) board a bit back and some people on there did some realy not nice stuff like getting in to these peoples e-mail accounts then sending out suicide notes to every one in there address books
That's so mean. Imagine the disappointment felt by the rest of the world when they discovered that MySpace users were not committing mass suicide.
MASantangelo
Premium
join:2004-07-19
Pittstown, NJ

If you're using your bank password as your myspace account password then you probably deserve to get your funds stolen. It's the only way some people will learn.
--
Don't Let Them Take Your Rights!

riturno

join:2004-04-20
Dallas, TX

Perhaps many of the commenters here should read the linked articles. The site that was taken down was a mailing list archive.

The owner of the site would have removed the information, but was not really given any notice before the take down.

Worse is that the list had been available on the web for over nine days before MySpace went after this one archive of the list. The list can still be found with Google.

Taking down this one copy of the list did nothing to help security for MySpace users or even make a dent in availability of the information.
RadioDoc
58ef2c0
Premium,ExMod 2000-03
join:2000-05-11
·AT&T Midwest

Re: Security Theater

said by riturno See Profile :

The list can still be found with Google.
Indeed. And who here will petition to have 'google.com' revoked because of it?

Anyone?

GoDaddy is out of control.
--
Toolmaster of La Grange.
Save the Pacific Northwest Tree Octopus!

DaneJasper
Sonic.Net
Premium,VIP
join:2001-08-20
Santa Rosa, CA
clubs:

That's silly - Myspace could have just locked all of the accounts down and required users to select new passwords via an email process. Or, just deleted all the accounts of the people who were silly enough to have their password captured.

-Dane

nwrickert
sand groper
Premium,MVM
join:2004-09-04
Geneva, IL
·AT&T U-Verse
·AT&T Midwest

Go Daddy clearly made a mistake in this case.

It would be an even worse mistake to not allow registrars to yank domains. Such a restriction would be of great benefit to phishers and scammers. We need phishing and scamming domains to be yanked as soon as possible.
deepblackmag

join:2004-12-27
00000

Re: Question of Authority..

The current system of yanking is obviously ineffective as there is no drop in spammers or scammers. Before you praise it, consider how successful it really is.

nwrickert
sand groper
Premium,MVM
join:2004-09-04
Geneva, IL
·AT&T U-Verse
·AT&T Midwest

Re: Question of Authority..

The current system of yanking is obviously ineffective as there is no drop in spammers or scammers. Before you praise it, consider how successful it really is.
That's like saying that having a fire department is ineffective, since there is no drop in fires.

The proper question is whether the number of victims is reduced.
deepblackmag

join:2004-12-27
00000

Re: Question of Authority..

arbitrary yanking with no due process or common sense is tantamount to having the fire department called when a person plugs in a space heater unsafely. It is an inappropriate response by an organization that should know better. There are many cases of such a reaction by godaddy and they should not be trusted with the power to do so at will.
Network Guy

join:2000-08-25
New York
·PHONE POWER
·Broadvox Direct
·Verizon Online DSL

Fuck that. That's like saying that GoDaddy needs reasonable intent to then ask ICANN if it's okay to kick them offline.

If you're an asshole enough to post something like that, you should be fine with getting the rug pulled from under your feet.
Forums » GoDaddy Takes SecLists.Org Offline« RE: GoDaddy Takes SecLists.Org Offline  


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