Everyone give it up for the fella who ran a webserver on a teapot
121 0 ReplyI like returning 418 instead of 404 or 403 on the files the script kiddies are hunting for on my web servers. I'm sure it does nothing but I'd like to think I've wasted some of their time at least once.
88 0 ReplyI'm glad that error exists.
28 0 ReplyYou had one chance to use 420 and you squandered it.
25 2 Reply
200: "I gotchu, bro. Here you go. Have a good day."
401: "You're not on the list. Get lost."
402: "Pay me or get lost."
403: "Everyone get lost."
404: "You are lost."
500: "Ooopsss."
501: "Knew I forgot something..."
504: "I can't do this shit all day."
64 1 Reply34 0 ReplyServing multiple data streams
19 0 ReplyI love the whimsy of developers.
13 0 Reply
429: "Please stop trying"
23 0 Reply401 is "I don't know who you are. Get fucked"
403 is "I know who you are and you're not allowed here. Get fucked"
17 1 Reply502: "I'm fucked, you're fucked, but most of all the developer trying to solve this is super fucked."
14 0 Reply451: “The law says get lost.”
6 0 Reply401 is more like “Tell me who tf you are or get lost”, while 403 means “You're not on the list, get lost”
1 0 Reply
Surprised no one's mentioned HTTP Cats yet:
Personally, HTTP 405 (Method not allowed) is my favorite:
32 0 ReplyWhy do these feel like the 5 stages of grief 🤔
26 0 Reply200 OK
{ "error": 404 }
23 0 ReplyMS Teams does this unironically
1 0 Reply
As a software developer / network admin, all of these are almost always "I fucked up configuring the web server".
21 1 Reply200: Here you go (secretly still an error)
16 0 ReplyThese are pretty good as an overview tbh. I like it when teachers have a sense of humour at least.
11 0 Reply🤣
7 0 Reply