On 18 Mar Bart Silverstrim wrote: > > On Mar 18, 2005, at 6:23 AM, Dick Hoogendijk wrote: > > >I log in from a remote windows computer on my school using PuTTY w/ > >ssh2. What I'd like to know is how *safe* is the login from this > >windows machine? > >I would like to be able to login to my home computer without being > >worried about some sneaky system operator at work (school) ;-) > > The SSH session, I believe, should be secure from sniffing (assuming > you're using protocol 2). > > If someone puts a keystroke logger on your windows machine, they will > get the password. > > If they put a hardware logger on your computer, they will get the data. > > If they are watching over your shoulder just as you misstype your > password as your username, you're probably in trouble. > > If someone is viewing your Windows desktop using remote monitoring > software (like a modified VNC), they'll see your session. > > If putty is trojaned, you're in trouble. > > If you're *really* paranoid about the connection, grab knoppix and use > it's ssh client to log in remotely.
OK, thank you and all others who responded so quickly. This summary is very clear. I changed all passwords right when I came back home ;-) Assuming bad news has not yet happened.. Maybe I'm paranoid but I'll go for knoppix next time. It's the safest way to go as I understand now. -- dick -- http://nagual.st/ -- PGP/GnuPG key: F86289CE ++ Running FreeBSD 4.11 ++ FreeBSD 5.3 + Nai tiruvantel ar vayuvantel i Valar tielyanna nu vilja _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"