From: Sean Donelan
Who has the biggest wall of big screen monitors?
To my knowledge, Norad still does.
quoted from article
The Global Early Warning Information System, (GEWIS, pronounced
gee-whiz)
[...]
Mark Rasch, former head of the Justice Department's Computer Crime division,
questioned
On Thu, 30 Jan 2003 04:21:40 CST, Jack Bates [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
in this. My question is why large providers couldn't interlink themselves
and establish guidelines for notification and resolution of network issues.
They manage it for peering, why not for overall performance and security
I very much agree with Vladis here.
I'm probably stating the obvious, but.. One of the major points visible
during virtually any one of these significant security events is the way
coordination works, how well processes are defined and how well they end up
working in terms of tactical
I say to that...
http://www.ofcourseimright.com/~lear/fishbowl.jpg
On Fri, 31 Jan 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
in this. My question is why large providers couldn't interlink themselves
and establish guidelines for notification and resolution of network issues.
They manage it for peering, why not for overall performance and security
issues?
I'll get
From: Sean Donelan
snip
On the other hand, security is a much bigger win for a larger provider
than for a small provider. As Willie Sutton use to say, he robbed banks
because that's were the money was. Larger providers have more exposure,
and more to loose. Even a non-directed attack such
Who has the biggest wall of big screen monitors?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A3409-2003Jan30.html