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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">No, but I have been thinking about
this. The problem is that a significant number of DSL lines still
use dynamic addresses, even if they don't change very often - but
they DO change. Remember also that IPV6 really is starting to take
off and local address randomisation will also stop that working
reliably. Equally, with CIDR ranges this risks clobbering lots of
unsuspecting people and - more importantly - risks me have to
diagnose extremely infrequent "random" connection problems which,
needless to say, I don't want to get into. <br>
<br>
Interestingly, after I put out my suggestion of using badwords I
haven't seen a spot from him. <br>
<br>
I have another suggestion for badword based exclusions:
set/badword wpmcq<br>
<br>
This hits the 'WPM CQ' part of the comment of an RBN spot.
Remember badwords target contiguous patterns not the bare word
(regex is <tt>m{W+\s*P+\s*M+\s*C+\s*Q+}i</tt>) so it will match
'wwwWWPppp Mmmm CQqqq' as well as plain 'WPM CQ'. <br>
<br>
What hacks me off about this, is that RBN spots have a
'<spotterl>-#' pattern which is rejected as an invalid spot
on an incoming user input, PC11 or PC61. For the same reason
spots from DXS (which come out as '<spotter-@') are also
rejected on input. This means that F8DGY is deliberately doing
this - he has clearly written a script to strip off the '-#' and
then injecting that now valid spot, automatically, into an
unsuspecting node. <br>
<br>
In the meantime I have added 'wpmcq' to my badwords list and we'll
see a) whether it works and/or b) it stops F8DGY's antisocial
behaviour. It will certainly slow him down if he connects to a
DXSpider node as it will disconnect him "for swearing" after every
4th spot :-)<br>
<br>
73 Dirk G1TLH <br>
<br>
On 04/03/2020 11:29, dd5xx--- via Dxspider-support wrote:<br>
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<div>Hi Dirk,</div>
<div> </div>
<div>is there a command to block his IP address ? something like
"set/badipaddr 83.114.21.17"</div>
<div>
<div>
<div>or even block a small range of his ISP address range
(asking just out of curiosity) "set/badipcidr
83.114.21.0\/24"</div>
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10px 0 10px 10px; border-left:2px solid #C3D9E5;
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<div style="margin:0 0 10px 0;"><b>Gesendet:</b> Dienstag,
03. März 2020 um 23:38 Uhr<br>
<b>Von:</b> "Dirk Koopman via Dxspider-support"
<a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="mailto:dxspider-support@tobit.co.uk"><dxspider-support@tobit.co.uk></a><br>
<b>An:</b> "dd5xx--- via Dxspider-support"
<a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="mailto:dxspider-support@tobit.co.uk"><dxspider-support@tobit.co.uk></a><br>
<b>Cc:</b> "Dirk Koopman" <a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="mailto:djk@tobit.co.uk"><djk@tobit.co.uk></a><br>
<b>Betreff:</b> Re: [Dxspider-support] F8DGY spammer ist
back as F8SDR</div>
<div name="quoted-content">A suggestion, try: set/badword
f8dgy<br>
<br>
I've had it running on gb7djk for a while, but it
appears that he has<br>
stopped for the evening. This should stop any spots
where he has signed<br>
his "work".<br>
<br>
Dirk G1TLH<br>
<br>
On 03/03/2020 18:33, dd5xx--- via Dxspider-support
wrote:<br>
> which shows us that this strange guy is using
various WAN connections<br>
> to pollute the DX cluster network:<br>
> 83.114.21.17 =
lfbn-idf3-1-427-17.w83-114.abo.wanadoo.fr = ASN 3215<br>
> Orange = Cable/DSL = Melun/France<br>
> 92.170.169.241 =
lfbn-idf3-1-1231-241.w92-170.abo.wanadoo.fr = ASN<br>
> 3215 Orange = Cable/DSL = Melun/France<br>
> 51.68.11.211 = gwc.cluster010.hosting.ovh.net = ASN
16276 which<br>
> belongs to ISP OVH SAS, obviously a virtual or root
server hosted there<br>
> 89.94.146.92 =
static-89-94-146-92.axione.abo.bbox.fr = ASN 5410<br>
> (Bouygues Telecom SA) = Cable/DSL = 87400
Saint-Leonard-de-Noblat,<br>
> Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France<br>
> I don't understand this guy, he is obviously
disturbing the ham radio<br>
> community. He must have real problems in life. He
knows he's<br>
> disturbing but continues his game. -facepalm-<br>
<br>
<br>
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