Panix (ISP)

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Panix Public Access Networks Corporation
Created by Alexis Rosen & Jim Baumbach
Services
  • Community/Social Networking
  • ISP
Founded in 1989
Location New York City, New York, USA

Panix is the third-oldest ISP in the world after The World and NetCom. Originally running on A/UX on an Apple Macintosh IIfx, Panix has gone through a number of transitions as the Internet has grown. It maintains a vibrant community of shell users and posters to its private panix.* USENET newsgroups.

Panix was started as a commercial venture to fill the void created after New York City's primary USENET connected public access system (which was donation supported), The Big Electric Cat, ceased operations. Today, Panix is a full-service provider, offering V-Colo virtual personal servers (VPS), mailboxes and other email services, assorted domain services, web hosting, real and virtual colocation, Internet access (T3s, T1s, SDSL, ADSL, and national dialup), and web programming and network consulting services. Panix also specializes in Unix shell access, from anywhere on the Internet, anywhere in the world.

Panix is a vocal supporter of free speech and uncensored internet access.[1]

Network security incidents[edit]

Panix was one of the first sites to identify the 1996 SYN flood Denial of service.[2][3]

In 2005, the "panix.com" domain name was hijacked over a (US) long holiday weekend.[4][5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Declaration of Alexis Rosen in ALA v. Pataki
  2. ^ PANIX ATTACK, Time Magazine
  3. ^ Charalampos Patrikakis, Michalis Masikos, and Olga Zouraraki, Distributed Denial of Service Attacks [1]
  4. ^ Jennifer LeClaire, ICANN Scrutinized in Wake of Panix Attack, E-Commerce Times [2]
  5. ^ Steven Cherry, Panix Attack: How New York City's oldest Internet service provider was hijacked and rescued IEEE Spectrum, Feb 2005 [3].

External links[edit]