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Showing posts with label owner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label owner. Show all posts

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Make Your Own Free Web Hosting CompanyMake Your Own Free Web Hosting Company

Hello friends, while i am browsing for some stuffs related to hosting. I found this Company, which offers to create your own free web hosting company.

I am using it from last 2 months, and my website is http://www.thehostingonline.info

I am Surprising to see that http://0fees.net , http://www.20x.cc and some other popular free hosting company is using this service.


BECOME YOUR OWN FREE HOSTING COMPANY

Create a free reseller account or purchase an upgraded reseller plan with a free domain and start building your own free hosting service, powered by a grid / cluster of Unix PHP, MySQL, FTP, Email, servers, supported by multiple upstream internet carriers, your own 'load-balanced' free hosting service will be fast and full of great features:

The My Own Free Host reseller service give you a 'white labeled' free hosting company with all of the following features and more!


Design/Create your own unique 'hosting company' home page with full FTP access and file manager, you can even use DreamWeaver or FrontPage to design your hosting company home page!

Unlimited free hosting websites / clients per reseller account.

Customizable and comprehensive free hosting solution

Upgradable reseller to provide larger quotas to your clients

(custom solutions available)

White labeled 'cpanel' on your own unique domain.

White labeled support system with transparent ticket escalation

While labeled name servers

Use your own domain name(s) (You can add any TLD to the reseller service)

Free sub domain provided to every free client.


Customizable MySQL database quotas per client

Customizable addon domain quotas per client

Customizable parked domain quotas per client

Customizable sub domain domain quotas per client

Customizable PHP sendmail per client (mass mailing not allowed)

Customizable 404, 500, 403 error documents using htaccess *paid upgrade*

Customizable community forum links to brand clients cpanel

Each free hosting client receives an individual CPU, Disk & traffic quota.

Auto-signup script included in default reseller home page template

Offer free hosting on your own domain(s)

Earn commission on paid hosting sales from home page

Earn commission from all sales made in your clients control panel

Earn money on custom client upgrades ie disable adverts or increase traffic/disk

Fully managed servers



How easy is it?



#Choose your Reseller Account plan

#Users start signing up for your service

#Visitors come to your Users websites

#You earn money from the advertising on your Users websites!


What will You Provide to Your visitors

Disk Space : 300 MB

Bandwidth : 6 GB

Addon Domains: 5

MySql Database : 3

Website Builder (With 300+ templates)

Free SubDomains

Unlimited E-mail IDs

Webmail and mail forwording

Shopping cart

FTP account

Online file manager

30+ scrripts ( PHP/CGI/Wordpresss/Joomla/and many more......)

Common Questions

How easy is it to earn money with free hosting?
When you create your own reseller account and start getting users to host their websites with your service, your advertising code will be automatically added to their websites and are displayed to every viewer who visits a user website hosted on your service!

Do I have FULL control over my advertising?
Yes! Your advertising is 100% yours, no advertising sharing between your ads and ours on your users websites like some other services out there and you can use any kind of advertising code such as your Google AdSense code or any other advertising network!

How do I attract users to my service?

It takes time and effort but if you advertise and market your service such as through forums, in web hosting directories, company listing websites, social networks and even to your friends and family, you will surely find people looking for web hosting and what better price than free?

Once you start getting users, and your users start getting viewers, you will find that your advertising revenue increases sometimes exponentially all because of people viewing and clicking on your advertisements!

Who manages the servers and deals with the network stuff?

Your users are hosted on our powerful Clustered Hosting Platform, the very same platform which powers the Byethost free hosting network of sites and, is completely maintained and managed by our corps of network and server engineers.


Sign up Now:

http://qzy.in/?s=8f72b1





ENJOY !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
 
 

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Backtracking EMAIL Messages

Ask most people how they determine who sent them an email message and the response is almost universally, "By the From line." Unfortunately this symptomatic of the current confusion among internet users as to where particular messages come from and who is spreading spam and viruses. The "From" header is little more than a courtesy to the person receiving the message. People spreading spam and viruses are rarely courteous. In short, if there is any question about where a particular email message came from the safe bet is to assume the "From" header is forged.


So how do you determine where a message actually came from? You have to understand how email messages are put together in order to backtrack an email message. SMTP is a text based protocol for transferring messages across the internet. A series of headers are placed in front of the data portion of the message. By examining the headers you can usually backtrack a message to the source network, sometimes the source host. A more detailed essay on reading email headers can be found.
If you are using Outlook or Outlook Express you can view the headers by right clicking on the message and selecting properties or options.

Below are listed the headers of an actual spam message I received. I've changed my email address and the name of my server for obvious reasons. I've also double spaced the headers to make them more readable.

Return-Path:

X-Original-To: davar@example.com

Delivered-To: davar@example.com

Received: from 12-218-172-108.client.mchsi.com (12-218-172-108.client.mchsi.com [12.218.172.108])
by mailhost.example.com (Postfix) with SMTP id 1F9B8511C7
for ; Sun, 16 Nov 2003 09:50:37 -0800 (PST)

Received: from (HELO 0udjou) [193.12.169.0] by 12-218-172-108.client.mchsi.com with ESMTP id <536806-74276>; Sun, 16 Nov 2003 19:42:31 +0200

Message-ID:

From: "Maricela Paulson"

Reply-To: "Maricela Paulson"

To: davar@example.com

Subject: STOP-PAYING For Your PAY-PER-VIEW, Movie Channels, Mature Channels...isha

Date: Sun, 16 Nov 2003 19:42:31 +0200

X-Mailer: Internet Mail Service (5.5.2650.21)

X-Priority: 3

MIME-Version: 1.0

Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="MIMEStream=_0+211404_9087
3633350646_4032088448" 
 According to the From header this message is from Maricela Paulson at s359dyxxt@yahoo.com. I could just fire off a message to abuse@yahoo.com, but that would be waste of time. This message didn't come from yahoo's email service.
The header most likely to be useful in determining the actual source of an email message is the Received header. According to the top-most Received header this message was received from the host 12-218-172-108.client.mchsi.com with the ip address of 21.218.172.108 by my server mailhost.example.com. An important item to consider is at what point in the chain does the email system become untrusted? I consider anything beyond my own email server to be an unreliable source of information. Because this header was generated by my email server it is reasonable for me to accept it at face value.

The next Received header (which is chronologically the first) shows the remote email server accepting the message from the host 0udjou with the ip 193.12.169.0. Those of you who know anything about IP will realize that that is not a valid host IP address. In addition, any hostname that ends in client.mchsi.com is unlikely to be an authorized email server. This has every sign of being a cracked client system.

Here's is where we start digging. By default Windows is somewhat lacking in network diagnostic tools; however, you can use the tools at to do your own checking.

davar@nqh9k:[/home/davar] $whois 12.218.172.108

AT&T WorldNet Services ATT (NET-12-0-0-0-1)
12.0.0.0 - 12.255.255.255
Mediacom Communications Corp MEDIACOMCC-12-218-168-0-FLANDREAU-MN (NET-12-218-168-0-1)
12.218.168.0 - 12.218.175.255

# ARIN WHOIS database, last updated 2003-12-31 19:15
# Enter ? for additional hints on searching ARIN's WHOIS database.

I can also verify the hostname of the remote server by using nslookup, although in this particular instance, my email server has already provided both the IP address and the hostname.

davar@nqh9k:[/home/davar] $nslookup 12.218.172.108

Server: localhost
Address: 127.0.0.1

Name: 12-218-172-108.client.mchsi.com
Address: 12.218.172.108

Ok, whois shows that Mediacom Communications owns that netblock and nslookup confirms the address to hostname mapping of the remote server,12-218-172-108.client.mchsi.com. If I preface a www in front of the domain name portion and plug that into my web browser, http://www.mchsi.com, I get Mediacom's web site.

There are few things more embarrassing to me than firing off an angry message to someone who is supposedly responsible for a problem, and being wrong. By double checking who owns the remote host's IP address using two different tools (whois and nslookup) I minimize the chance of making myself look like an idiot.

A quick glance at the web site and it appears they are an ISP. Now if I copy the entire message including the headers into a new email message and send it to abuse@mchsi.com with a short message explaining the situation, they may do something about it.

But what about Maricela Paulson? There really is no way to determine who sent a message, the best you can hope for is to find out what host sent it. Even in the case of a PGP signed messages there is no guarantee that one particular person actually pressed the send button. Obviously determining who the actual sender of an email message is much more involved than reading the From header. Hopefully this example may be of some use to other forum regulars.

ENJOY..!