9/29/05 --433c4637433c495d-- 67.60.70.55 - 67.60.73.93 "CABLE ONE" (67.60.0.0 - 67.60.127.255)
10/3/05 --434077f843407a43-- 67.64.119.248 - 67.64.122.67 "SBC Internet Services" (67.64.0.0 - 67.67.255.255)
10/4/05 --4342c9694342cb20-- 67.66.201.105 - 67.66.203.32
10/5/05 --43439076434397ad-- 67.67.144.118 - 67.67.151.173
10/5/05 --4343fd764343fe9c-- 67.67.253.118 - 67.67.254.156
10/12/05 --434d1b4f434d1b7c-- 67.77.27.79 - 67.77.27.124 "Sprint DSL Network" (67.76.0.0 - 67.77.255.255)
10/12/05 --434d1b4f434d1b7e-- 67.77.27.79 - 67.77.27.126
10/12/05 --434d1b4f434d1b84-- 67.77.27.79 - 67.77.27.132
10/12/05 --434d6d78434d6d86-- 67.77.109.120 - 67.77.109.134
Oh I meant to comment not just post that.
They are IP ranges. Each post was 8 octets, IPs are 4 octets each. After I posted I read where someone successfully put them in two columns, nice job. See how the first octet and the fifth octet (first in the right column) are the same digits? That clues us in to the IP ranges, too regular if they were some other sort of code or serial number.
I'll leave it up to your collective imagination to specualte as to why they are posting IP ranges, which all map back to (american) internet service IPs. Interesting how out of all the IPs in the world there are no corporate IPs, web servers, foriegn IPs etc.
Welcome to TM and FR.