On Tue, May 21, 2002 at 03:06:57PM +0200, Marcus Brinkmann wrote: > On Tue, May 21, 2002 at 07:42:25AM +0200, Jeroen Dekkers wrote: > > On 30 years old operating systems like unix it might be. Modern > > operating systems like GNU/Hurd don't need a firewall. It even gives > > everybody a login shell when they telnet in without any problems. > > Uh, well, with the problem of setting up the no user id flags in the > filesystem, and with the problem of Denial Of Service attacks. > > The feature you described will not be the default for incoming remote > connections. > > But if you are referring to the no-user-id, then that one is useful > unrelated to telnet. It makes it possible for a server to drop all > permissions and raise them later as needed.
When a user doesn't want to have security we should make that possible IMHO. There should be a security level "none" or "very very low". I have yet to see a reason why this should be impossible. Read about ITS, having no security can be practical. The nice thing about the Hurd is that it can have a very, very high security or no security at all depending on how you configure it. Jeroen Dekkers -- Jabber ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED] IRC ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED] GNU supporter - http://www.gnu.org
pgpYnv52JTgq3.pgp
Description: PGP signature