From: Geoff Zinderdine (geoffz@xxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Jun 13 2002 - 11:07:53 GMT-3
Let me relish for a moment the delicious irony of someone complaining
about the CCIE "becoming like the MCSE", all the while not understanding
something as straightforward as smtp headers. So much for "experience".
Geoff Zinderdine
On Thu, 2002-06-13 at 14:35, Paul Borghese wrote:
> Some people have been asking me about the hunt for "Peter Rosenthal" (sounds
> like a Tom Clancy novel :-).. If you recall last month someone posting as
> "Peter Rosenthal" was making derogatory comments about various people on the
> list, GroupStudy.com, and the CCIE Lab program itself. From the beginning I
> knew this was an alias and a coward was hiding behind the real address. I
> am working with AOL (where the majority of the e-mails were posted) to
> obtain the real name behind the sender. While they are cooperative, there
> are a number of legal steps I need to take in order to obtain the name.
>
> But the sender did make a mistake allowing us to close in on the sender. On
> May 2nd a Peter Rosenthal posting was made from the IP address 216.45.3.175
> to the CCIE Lab list. You can verify this by viewing the header of the
> e-mail. If you do a whois from www.arin.net you will find the block is
> owned by Network Learning Inc. NLI is unable to tell us who was using that
> IP address as they do not keep those records - they did say a class was in
> session during that week. Since the posting was made from a Network Learning
> Inc. assigned IP address - it is reasonable to believe the poster had access
> to NLI's network. It has to be someone who has access to Network Learning
> Inc's network and has an AOL account.
>
> I am just now gathering up the last bit of information for AOL. We should
> have an answer soon.
>
> So that is currently where we stand.
>
> Take care,
>
> Paul
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Tue Jul 02 2002 - 08:12:32 GMT-3