On a more serious note if you're providing a router to a customer as a CPE, it should never have anything in the config that you don't want the customer to know. If they tamper with it, and it's your equipment, I'm pretty sure that's a crime. It's rather trivial to get into any router and grab the config out of the nvram. I wouldn't keep anything proprietary in a configuration servicing just one customer, even if you manage the router. If the customer absolutely needs this type of access tell them they need to purchase the router; charge them, change the passwords and hand them the keys.

--
Robert Blayzor, BOFH
INOC, LLC
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.inoc.net/~rblayzor/



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