  RickNY Premium join:2000-11-02 New York
| reply to mozart11 Re: What's up with OOL domain servers now?
»www.optimum.net/Article/DNS
Can I opt-out of the DNS Assistance Service? Yes, you can opt-out of the service. If you opt-out of the service, you will no longer receive any search based help when you misspell or mistype a web address, but instead you will receive browser error messages. When you opt-out of the service, it will affect all computers that are in your household and accessing the Internet by Optimum Online Service. |
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  MxxCon
join:1999-11-19 Brooklyn, NY clubs:   | woah, how long have they been doing this dns hijacking? |
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 mozart11
join:2004-02-02 Mineola, NY 1 edit | reply to RickNY I found the opt out. I wonder if it is just a cookie set? I delete cookies all the time.
This is jut mad |
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 TheWiseGuy Dog And Butterfly Premium,MVM join:2002-07-04 Yonkers, NY
3 edits | reply to MxxCon I read recently that they were about to implement it. 
I can't find where I read it though 
I'm still getting a "No such name" reply, here is the response, copied from wireshark, from the OOL server I use, to a mis-typed name.
4 2008-09-25 07:16:24.040443 192.168.0.2 167.206.251.129 DNS Standard query A www.nasdaqrrader.com
5 2008-09-25 07:16:24.061915 167.206.251.129 192.168.0.2 DNS Standard query response, No such name
EDIT Here is what I remember seeing
»www.cablerant.com/index.php?topi···#msg2470
Not sure where I saw the info from cablerant since I don't read cablerant. -- Warning, If you post nonsense and use misinformation and are here to argue based on those methods, you will be put on ignore. |
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 stevehoff
join:2005-12-16 Ardsley, NY | reply to mozart11 Opt out is not cookie based. It opts out your modem and is permanent, even if your IP address changes. |
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  yummcookies
@cablevision.com
| reply to mozart11 said by mozart11 :I found the opt out. I wonder if it is just a cookie set? I delete cookies all the time. This is jut mad Yes it is cookie based because cookies on one PC will affect every computer in the house. That is how cookies work. |
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  RickNY Premium join:2000-11-02 New York
| said by yummcookies :
cookies on one PC will affect every computer in the house. That is how cookies work. Ah yes -- I love when Cablevision employees know what they are talking about.  |
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  Jmartz
join:2000-07-20 Tenafly, NJ
| Cablevision should have done this as an "opt IN" service. Basically it doesn't get turned on unless people go and turn it on.
It appears as though Cablevision is trying to be super controlling lately. First they hijack your ability to watch SD feeds if you have an HD cable box without letting you shut it off, and then they turn this thing... thankfully it can be opted out. But they didn't exactly tell people it was going to happen... most people probably don't even know that the channel mappings were going to change on the cable boxes either. |
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  Muppet
@co.uk
from: StreetSpirit 
| reply to yummcookies Your the exact user this is aimed at. One that does not know what a cookie is and what it does. Good job they opt-in you chaps, you'd never be able to do it yourself. |
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  yummcookies
@cablevision.com
| reply to RickNY said by RickNY :said by yummcookies :
cookies on one PC will affect every computer in the house. That is how cookies work. Ah yes -- I love when Cablevision employees know what they are talking about. That is the bad thing about forums, hard to read sarcasm.  |
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  Lex Luthor Premium,Mod join:2000-09-17 Hicksville, NY
Host: OptimumOnline Users Find Hot Deals Users find Hot Dea.. Requests for Hot D..
| reply to stevehoff said by stevehoff :Opt out is not cookie based. It opts out your modem and is permanent, even if your IP address changes. Anyone able to verify yet if it is cookie or modem based?
I just tried it from a Lightpath connection and it said I have opted out, so I'm probably thinking it's just a cookie, which would be pretty lame. |
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  yummcookies
@cablevision.com
| said by Lex Luthor :said by stevehoff :Opt out is not cookie based. It opts out your modem and is permanent, even if your IP address changes. Anyone able to verify yet if it is cookie or modem based? I just tried it from a Lightpath connection and it said I have opted out, so I'm probably thinking it's just a cookie, which would be pretty lame. I opted out using the browser in my PS3 and now all 6 PCs in my house do not get redirection page. This is obviously not cookie based. |
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  RickNY Premium join:2000-11-02 New York
| said by yummcookies :
Yes it is cookie based said by yummcookies :
This is obviously not cookie based. Wow, this is almost like calling customer service |
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  yummcookies
@cablevision.com
| said by RickNY :said by yummcookies :
Yes it is cookie based said by yummcookies :
This is obviously not cookie based. Wow, this is almost like calling customer service said by yummcookies :said by RickNY :said by yummcookies :
cookies on one PC will affect every computer in the house. That is how cookies work. Ah yes -- I love when Cablevision employees know what they are talking about. That is the bad thing about forums, hard to read sarcasm. Wow, this almost like not reading. |
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  StreetSpirit Premium join:2002-08-13 Roslyn, NY
·Optimum Online
·Verizon Online DSL
| reply to yummcookies said by yummcookies :said by mozart11 :I found the opt out. I wonder if it is just a cookie set? I delete cookies all the time. This is jut mad Yes it is cookie based because cookies on one PC will affect every computer in the house. That is how cookies work. Uhh, yeah...  |
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  Anonymus Coward
@optonline.net
| reply to Lex Luthor said by Lex Luthor :said by stevehoff :Opt out is not cookie based. It opts out your modem and is permanent, even if your IP address changes. Anyone able to verify yet if it is cookie or modem based? I just tried it from a Lightpath connection and it said I have opted out, so I'm probably thinking it's just a cookie, which would be pretty lame. It's most definitely modem-based, and MUCH smarter than any other so-called "opt-out" scheme we've seen at other ISPs for DNS-hijacking, such as:
- having to configure specific other DNS servers manually (Verizon) - Cookie-based "opt-out" that really isn't changing the underlying DNS fuckage (various ISPs), only the browser's presentation.
It appears that the opt-out even survives hooking up another device to the cable modem (try it - hook up your PC instead of your AP/NAT), using a different ethernet MAC - the DNS-hijacking remains *OFF*.
While other ISPs have paid at most lipservice with their so-called 'opt-out'. They designed it cutting corners and with the intent to make it difficult enough to actively deter people from opting out, but OOL seems to have achieved something everyone else hasn't: opt-out at low protocol level that's sticky for good:
After opting out, from another machine here:
$ dig @167.206.254.1 foobar.dslreports.com a
; > DiG 9.3.3 > @167.206.254.1 foobar.dslreports.com a ; (1 server found) ;; global options: printcmd ;; Got answer: ;; ->>HEADER- opcode: QUERY, status: NXDOMAIN, id: 27150 ;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 0, AUTHORITY: 1, ADDITIONAL: 0
;; QUESTION SECTION: ;foobar.dslreports.com. IN A
;; AUTHORITY SECTION: dslreports.com. 1200 IN SOA ns0.easydns.com. admin.easydns.com. 1217062612 21600 7200 604800 1200
;; Query time: 58 msec ;; SERVER: 167.206.254.1#53(167.206.254.1) ;; WHEN: Fri Sep 26 22:21:41 2008 ;; MSG SIZE rcvd: 94
e.g.: no resolution for something that DSLR has explicitly decided does not exist. |
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