There are networks that seem to block by traffic by protocol in addition to
blocking by port or destination.
I do wonder about how realistic an HTTPS-based cluster protocol (plain ol' HTTP
isn't quite as deprecated as telnet, but it's getting there) actually is for
those of us who like drinking from the RBN firehose.
--
Michael Adams | mda@n1en.org
-----Original Message-----
From: CQ-Contest <cq-contest-bounces@contesting.com> On Behalf Of Andy KU7T
Sent: Thursday, 5 September, 2019 17:25
To: Sterling Mann <kawfey@gmail.com>; N4ZR <n4zr@comcast.net>
Cc: w1ve@yccc.org; Ria Jairam <rjairam@gmail.com>; CQ-Contest
<cq-contest@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] Is there any HTTP cluster streams (not telnet)?
TCP is a transport-layer protocol, and HTTP is an application-layer protocol
that runs over TCP. Just like Telnet. If you worried about ports, couldn't you
run Telnet on port 80 and be done with it?
Andy
KU7T
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