ganesh_mourthy wrote:Leave your PC to the hands of not so savvy friend for a couple of hours and you would find your computer behaving stranger than your life partner.
It is just that anything that my PC says, I dont take it seriously.
Oh ok! In the following seconds all the N plants around the world would also explode , and the flying flights would fall right on your confused head, so there is not much to worry.
Never agree with technology completely

ganesh_mourthy: That is quite funny. So many great lines.
It is interesting that you have gotten that blocked message before
Just for the information of others, the message Sri. Venkatakailasam got was
"IP address <his ip> has been blocked..The message is from SPAMHAUS".
Here is the wikipedia entry for SPAMHAUS:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Spamhaus_Project
"SPAMHAU is an international organization, based in both London and Geneva, founded in 1998 by Steve Linford to track email spammers and spam-related activity. The name spamhaus, a pseudo-German expression, was coined by Linford for an Internet service provider, or other firm, which spams or knowingly provides service to spammers."
if you read the page, you will see while it did some good in keeping spammers away, it detects many false positives as well like the one that had happened to venkatakailasam and many others.
There are still some missing pieces of info as to how V'kailasam can go to other sites without SPAMHAUS blocking it. On the other hand, the reason he could login later is probably because the ISP provided a different dynamic IP which SPAMHAUS did not block. I am just speculating.
(btw, regarding dynamic and static IPs, my experience is dynamic IPs are much more prevalent in India than U.S. Ranganayaki, what Nick said is correct. Banks and others use cookies to find out if you are coming from a new computer or not. Those are not IP based )