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Fire Walk With Me

(38,893 posts)
Fri Dec 30, 2011, 10:35 PM Dec 2011

SOPA Emergency IP list

Last edited Sat Dec 31, 2011, 05:39 PM - Edit history (2)

Stolen from :

http://lyssamae.tumblr.com/post/14447182846

anglophonic:

So when these (questionable persons) in DC decide to ruin the internet, here’s how to access your favorite sites in the event of a DNS takedown

Photobucket.com - 209.17.88.100
Democracynow.com - 174.122.141.3
Democraticunderground.com - 216.158.28.197
(Thank you SaintPete)

tumblr.com 174.121.194.34
wikipedia.org 208.80.152.201

# News
bbc.co.uk 212.58.241.131
aljazeera.com 198.78.201.252

# Social media
reddit.com 72.247.244.88
imgur.com 173.231.140.219
google.com 74.125.157.99
youtube.com 74.125.65.91
yahoo.com 98.137.149.56
hotmail.com 65.55.72.135
bing.com 65.55.175.254
digg.com 64.191.203.30
theonion.com 97.107.137.164
hush.com 65.39.178.43
gamespot.com 216.239.113.172
ign.com 69.10.25.46
cracked.com 98.124.248.77
sidereel.com 144.198.29.112
github.com 207.97.227.239

# Torrent sites
thepiratebay.org 194.71.107.15
mininova.com 80.94.76.5
btjunkie.com 93.158.65.211
demonoid.com 62.149.24.66
demonoid.me 62.149.24.67

# Social networking
facebook.com 69.171.224.11
twitter.com 199.59.149.230
tumblr.com 174.121.194.34
livejournal.com 209.200.154.225
dreamwidth.org 69.174.244.50
deviantart.com 199.15.160.100


# Live Streaming Content
stickam.com 67.201.54.151
blogtv.com 84.22.170.149
justin.tv 199.9.249.21
chatroulette.com 184.173.141.231
omegle.com 97.107.132.144
own3d.tv 208.94.146.80
megavideo.com 174.140.154.32

# Television
gorillavid.com 178.17.165.74
videoweed.com 91.220.176.248
novamov.com 91.220.176.248
tvlinks.com 208.223.219.206
1channel.com 208.87.33.151

# Shopping
amazon.com 72.21.211.176
newegg.com 216.52.208.187
frys.com 209.31.22.39

# File Sharing
mediafire.com 205.196.120.13
megaupload.com 174.140.154.20
snip'd some contentious sites
dropbox.com 199.47.217.179
pastebin.com 69.65.13.216

Added LJ and DW.

Here’s a tip for the do-it-yourself crowd: Go to your computer’s Start menu, and either go to “run” or just search for “cmd.” Open it up, and type in “ping [website address],” like so:

C:\Users\Sarah>ping archiveofourown.org

Once you have the IP for a website, all you really need to do is enter it like you would a normal URL and hit enter/press go. Typing in “208.85.240.231” should bring you to the front page of AO3, for example, just as typing “174.121.194.34/dashboard” should bring you straight to your Tumblr dashboard. Since we’re obviously bracing for the worst case scenario which would involve you not being able to access Tumblr regularly, you should, like, save this list, I guess.

added deviantArt

EVERYONE REBLOG THIS

13 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
SOPA Emergency IP list (Original Post) Fire Walk With Me Dec 2011 OP
Thanks! Sharing amyrose2712 Dec 2011 #1
Isn't this how we got around the internet in the "olden days?" MADem Dec 2011 #2
Yes. I can still remember a couple of IPs I telnetted to... n/t gkhouston Dec 2011 #3
a few more SaintPete Dec 2011 #4
How do we bookmark under DU3? The Backlash Cometh Dec 2011 #5
Good help but you may not realize. airplaneman Dec 2011 #6
Totally believe you. truedelphi Dec 2011 #12
WHERE IS THE BOOKMARK FUNCTION!! (IP emergency list) annabanana Dec 2011 #7
If this site becomes blocked, you'd want the list stored somewhere in your computer Fire Walk With Me Dec 2011 #8
Couldn't the links be found by googling them? freshwest Dec 2011 #9
What if you type google.com and nothing comes up? mwooldri Dec 2011 #11
more ideas: get a virtual private network (VPN) mwooldri Dec 2011 #10
An internet alternative is I2P toddaa Dec 2011 #13

MADem

(135,425 posts)
2. Isn't this how we got around the internet in the "olden days?"
Fri Dec 30, 2011, 11:13 PM
Dec 2011

I seem to remember a book, like the Yellow Pages, with this sort of info in it...!

SaintPete

(533 posts)
4. a few more
Sat Dec 31, 2011, 11:58 AM
Dec 2011

Photobucket.com - 209.17.88.100

Democracynow.com - 174.122.141.3


and of course:

Democraticunderground.com - 216.158.28.197

airplaneman

(1,240 posts)
6. Good help but you may not realize.
Sat Dec 31, 2011, 04:26 PM
Dec 2011

These updated bills will allow your ISP to block you with any entry for the website that is sensored or believed to need sensoring by the entertainment industry. Comcast already expeirmented with resetting Bit-Torrent so it would not run. Now if this passes they can, at their disrestion, decide which sites to block you from accessing in any way as long as they are your ISP. The self regulating pressure will assure that a lot of things will be removed even if it is not necessary out of fear of being sued. This stuff is bad news and will transform the internet itself into a highly sensored media. These bills need to be stopped and we do not have much time.
-Airplane

truedelphi

(32,324 posts)
12. Totally believe you.
Sat Dec 31, 2011, 07:33 PM
Dec 2011

My husband got all the Twitter feeds he wanted,a s he had signed up on the Occupy sites before they gained momentum. I was too busy to get aboard till later, and every time I tried to access an Occupy twitter-er, I'd be told to "try back later."

Though I still don't have and never had any problem gaining access to someone's Twitter account if the account is about recipes or dogs.

freshwest

(53,661 posts)
9. Couldn't the links be found by googling them?
Sat Dec 31, 2011, 05:48 PM
Dec 2011

Ain't no way that puppy is going to go away, no matter what.

And shouldn't you post this in the Meta forum?

Skinner, Elad or EarlG would know how to get around this sort of thing, already.

I really don't understand this.

mwooldri

(10,303 posts)
11. What if you type google.com and nothing comes up?
Sat Dec 31, 2011, 06:59 PM
Dec 2011

Or you can go to google but it doesn't get you to a list like this?

SOPA and Pipa must both die, because they both legislate on how DNS servers are to operate. DNS is essentially the Internets' "yellow pages". SOPA directs operators of DNS servers by court order to "de-list" certain domain names. It is the equivalent of a court order barring me from putting my phone number in the "yellow pages"... except with the Internet you need a yellow pages to get anywhere. DNS so far is set up so there is no "delist" function in the way the legislation is calling for. There are also millions of DNS servers so the court order would have to be served electronically - introducing a new security hole in DNS which already has vulnerabilities. A notable event happened a few months ago when a DNS server was compromised by hackers, and the domain names for Microsoft.com, ups.com and a whole bunch of other names were redirected to the hackers' computer system. The system corrected itself but it goes to show that if a couple of talented individuals can bring down huge chunks of the Internet with relative ease, then Congress should have as much trust as those "talented individuals" in handling the domain name service.

mwooldri

(10,303 posts)
10. more ideas: get a virtual private network (VPN)
Sat Dec 31, 2011, 06:25 PM
Dec 2011

A VPN setup effectively sets your computers location to be "somewhere else".

If SOPA comes to be, a VPN becomes a way to have a normal web experience. There are plenty of reasons for having a VPN - telecommuting being a big one.

This, with web proxies, is how people in places like the PRC or Iran get around their governmental restrictions and access "banned" websites. Like bbcnews.com or youtube or twitter and facebook...

People who use a form of Linux (or on macosx) can add these domain names and corresponding IP addresses to their hosts file (found on /etc/hosts on Linux systems) so that by typing in the expected name comes to the right IP address - providing the Il address doesn't change.

toddaa

(2,518 posts)
13. An internet alternative is I2P
Sat Dec 31, 2011, 11:12 PM
Dec 2011

What is I2P? It's a peer to peer anonymous network running in complete isolation from the rest of the internet. Unlike TOR, which is vulnerable to man in the middle attacks, I2P does not require outbound proxies. Because it does not use a central DNS addressing scheme, it's nearly impossible to shut down.

Software and info can be found at http://www.i2p2.de/

Note that I2P is a darknet and there are unsavory parts, some of which will be flowing through your router, if you choose to use it.

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