] "I'm not aware of it ever happening before," Casey said. ] ".gov, .edu and .mil carry a feeling of ] trustworthiness...People have learned to place more faith ] in them." ] ] Claiming credit for the deleted .gov site is a man who ] calls himself Robert L. Taylor III, whose name and ] contact information appeared in documents on the AONN.gov ] site. ] ] Taylor, who appears to reside near Everett, Wash., ] declined to explain how, exactly, he secured a .gov ] domain for the group, calling AONN's operations ] "classified." ] ] "We have exploited a security hole in the bureaucracy," ] Taylor said in a telephone interview. "There are ] loopholes, there are security holes, there are holes in ] the system." It may be the first time a .gov domain has been jacked.. Used to happen all the time with .edu domains. I remember an old text ezine named Radioactive Aardvark Dung getting rad.edu several years go. This isn't the only example of it, but its the only one I can think of at the molment. A quick google turns up some info on that one: http://public.planetmirror.com/pub/textfiles/history/radexposed.txt ] we wanted to get our own domain, instead of a long url like ] we had. so phorce, with all of his infinite knowledge, told ] me he could get and host a .edu domain. one catch, you have ] to be a four year institution of higher learning to get that ] -- and we were a stupid humor zine. phorce wrote up a flyer ] in publisher for raleigh art & design school & faxed it to ] internic. yes, it was that easy. we had our domain in a ] few days, with our own .edu e-mail addresses. a feat that ] has never been and will never be topped in the 'zine scene. ] to make this believable, i added a little note at the main ] page that said "radioactive aardvark dung is joint project ] done by the senior staff at raleigh art & design school." ] and we never had a problem with it. |