I also call bullshit.. OpenBSD does NOT allow ssh root login by
default.. why do you think that they have such an excellent security
track record..




On Thu, 2005-02-10 at 09:44, Steven Critchfield wrote:
> On Thu, 2005-02-10 at 11:36 -0500, Noah Miller wrote:
> > > IMO, your best defence is leaving ssh's default setting 
> > > which disallows root logins entirely.  There's no reason 
> > > for a remote user to ever have to log in as root.  Root 
> > > access should be obtained by a logged-in normal user 
> > > using sudo, or su.
> > 
> > I'm not sure what happens when you do a fresh compile and 
> > install of OpenSSH, but every distro I've ever worked with
> > (Red Hat, Gentoo, Slackware, Vector, Tao, Yellow Dog, 
> > Debian, Knoppix, SuSe, Linspire, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Darwin, 
> > OS X) has allowed root logins via SSH by default.  Maybe 
> > they're changing that on newer versions of some distros.  
> > I dunno.
> 
> I'll call bullshit on that. I know for a fact that Debian does NOT allow
> root logins except from console. Hell Debian isn't allowing root logins
> from X anymore due to the likely hood for you to try and use root for
> more than administration.
> 
> I know Mandrake does annoying things if you try to login as root on
> anything but console to also discourage it's use.
> 
> I don't expect much from Linspire as it attempts to be windows. As for
> the rest in your list other than OS X, I wouldn't bother trying to run
> them when you have Debian available.
-- 
Derek Whitten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
kFuQ Productions

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