It found <a href="http://127.249.137.9" rel="nofollow">http://127.249.137.9</a> for me and it totally works! I can even ssh to it, let's try a fork bo^#@~<p><i>[connection reset by peer]</i>
IANAL but I would caution accessing these, they may constitute hacking in your local region.<p>I would doubly caution owning this, particularly given the wording on the site encourages messing with people’s servers…
I'm waiting for someone to get our corporate VPN on a blacklist just by clicking the button and hitting a honeypot. Granted, it's what I get for hitting the button without reading the code, so, shame on me?
function randomIP() {<p><pre><code> return int2ip(Math.random()\*4294967296) ;
</code></pre>
}<p>says it all - better don't "mess" with what you encounter
DO NOT DO THIS.<p>I have a few servers exposed on IP addresses, but they are not meant for public access. You have no authorization for 'messing' with this site: what you deem playing around, might be hacking.<p>You may also hit a government or military IP address, known or unknown. If you mess around with them, you may receive some unfriendly visits from men in black.
Scary - I get some strange URL that encouraged me to install some CSS plugin. How do you random those names? Are they only some random IPs?
BTW. some history would be nice, as I couldn't find this server again :(
This is an extremely bad idea. Your chances of getting some malware are probably more likely than not, after playing around with something like this for 10+ minutes...