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Doug Noon

Items from 42 people Doug Noon follows

Allison Kipta

Spoofer Project: Spoofer Main

"The MIT ANA Spoofer project measures the Internet's susceptibility to spoofed source address IP packets. Malicious users capitalize on the ability to "spoof" source IP addresses for anonymity, indirection, targeted attacks and security circumvention. Compromised hosts on networks that permit IP spoofing enable a wide variety of attacks. "

Shared by Allison Kipta, 1 save total

Allison Kipta

CAIDA

"The Cooperative Association for Internet Data Analysis (CAIDA) is located at the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) on the campus of the University of California, San Diego. "

Shared by Allison Kipta, 28 saves total

Allison Kipta

Skitter Graph - P2P Foundation

""the “Skitter Graph” by the Cooperative Association for Internet Data Analysis (Caida) – an academic offshoot of the military-industrial complex, based in the city of San Diego. This map shows a record of peering sessions between some 12,500 “autonomous systems” (basically equivalent to Internet Service Providers, or ISPs).2 To produce it, twenty-five different monitoring points run a “traceroute” program known as Skitter over a period of two weeks, following packets from over 1,100,000 IP addresses. The researchers analyze the path of the packet stream, which is only considered significant when it goes outside its autonomous system of origin. Information from the Border Gateway Protocol database is used to track each message back to a localized ISP. The graph displays the major link lines between the autonomous systems, and represents the quantity of outgoing connections per ISP, placing the lower values on the edges, in light blue, with higher intensities as you move toward the center, in dark blue, violet, orange and finally yellow. But to give all this data the form of a world map, it is also organized by the geographical location of the ISPs – or at least, their head offices – which are distributed around the circle according to longitude. "

Shared by Allison Kipta, 1 save total

Allison Kipta

Main Page - AcademicBlogs

"Welcome to the main portal page for the academic blogs wiki. Brad DeLong has described the academic blogosphere as a kind of Invisible College - this site is supposed to help make the College a little more visible to itself and its readers. It is a work in progress and will remain that way. It draws on updated information from (a) the Crooked Timber academic blogroll, (b) Cliopatria's list of history weblogs and (c) Daniel Solove's Law Professor Blogger Census. With the exception of a few pages (including this one), it is freely modifiable, so that users can themselves add blogs and other forms of content that may be useful to academic bloggers and academics academics more generally. Before modifying the contents of this wiki in any way, you should consult the Frequently Asked Questions. If you are unfamiliar with how to change wikis, consult the basic directions, and, for more advanced topics, Wikipedia's detailed editing FAQ (this wiki is based on Mediawiki, the underlying platform for Wikipedia). Anonymous editing is no longer allowed because of spamming - you need to create a personal ID first, and solve a simple addition or subtraction problem to prove that you are a Real Human Being."

Shared by Allison Kipta, 44 saves total

radagast

Radagast of Rhosgobel on 2006-10-13

Site that lists many academic blogs.

jlesage

Julia Lesage on 2006-12-01

A wiki about academic blogs, with links to blogs in each academic area of study

Allison Kipta

Distance Education Clearinghouse

"The Distance Education Clearinghouse is comprehensive and widely recognized web site bringing together distance education information from Wisconsin, national, and international sources. New information and resources are being added to the Distance Education Clearinghouse on a continual basis. Our mission is to produce a quality, highly maintained and frequently updated web site that provides a wide range of information about distance education and related resources. The Distance Education Clearinghouse is managed and maintained by the University of Wisconsin-Extension, in cooperation with its partners and other University of Wisconsin institutions. The Distance Education Clearinghouse was launched on the web in 1995. We first appeared as an electronic bulletin board in the 1980s. In the early 1990s, we re-tooled our resources to be available via the gopher protocol (remember the gopher?!). When the web version arrived, there were only a dozen or so web sites devoted to distance education and related topics. We've been going strong ever since, receiving communications and inquiries from visitors worldwide. In 2006, our web site was totally redesigned. "

Shared by Allison Kipta, 26 saves total

Allison Kipta

About the Distance Education Clearinghouse

"The Distance Education Clearinghouse is comprehensive and widely recognized web site bringing together distance education information from Wisconsin, national, and international sources. New information and resources are being added to the Distance Education Clearinghouse on a continual basis. Our mission is to produce a quality, highly maintained and frequently updated web site that provides a wide range of information about distance education and related resources. The Distance Education Clearinghouse is managed and maintained by the University of Wisconsin-Extension, in cooperation with its partners and other University of Wisconsin institutions. The Distance Education Clearinghouse was launched on the web in 1995. We first appeared as an electronic bulletin board in the 1980s. In the early 1990s, we re-tooled our resources to be available via the gopher protocol (remember the gopher?!). When the web version arrived, there were only a dozen or so web sites devoted to distance education and related topics. We've been going strong ever since, receiving communications and inquiries from visitors worldwide. In 2006, our web site was totally redesigned. "

Shared by Allison Kipta, 2 saves total

Allison Kipta

My Website Design Was Stolen! Now What? - Smashing Magazine

The myth persists that if content is put online, it’s fair game. Others think that if a copyright isn’t explicitly stated, then it doesn’t exist. In either case, the person who has taken your design likely doesn’t realize that they’ve done anything wrong.
In other cases, someone might take your design because they feel it’s an excellent example of what a website in their niche should look like or because the company behind the website is a leader in the industry. These people may or may not realize that what they’re doing is wrong or at least may not realize just how wrong it is.

Shared by Allison Kipta, 3 saves total

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