[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > In todays socio/political climate, telco infrastructure is seen as > foundational, and an essential service that is vital in times of > emergency. Any unauthorised modification can present an unacceptable risk > exposure to the telco, the emergency services, and to the public in > general. This said, the telcos may not be providing the best security (and > in some cases their security is non-existent) however this does not mean > that an unauthorised person is entitle to make changes, or even enter the > site.
In these parts, security has only gotten tighter with time. Pillars are padlocked, and the vigilance is way up. Increased population and free access to information on the Internet has made everything more vulnerable, and Telus, anyway, is not ignorant of this. Stuff I did as a teenager (don't tell my mother) I couldn't hope to get away with now, and at my age, "I was just curious" doesn't cut it as an excuse any longer. -Stephen- _______________________________________________ --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com -- asterisk-users mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users