That is great! All good so far.Anne Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Thursday 24 Mar 2005 23:49, DAN WALKER wrote:> That worked a treat. Thank you very much. I can't> believe that this is not documented and easy to find> somewhere. I looked all over the place but found the> answer here thanks t
On Thursday 24 Mar 2005 23:49, DAN WALKER wrote:
> That worked a treat. Thank you very much. I can't
> believe that this is not documented and easy to find
> somewhere. I looked all over the place but found the
> answer here thanks to you, anne.
>
Dan, you can find lots of help on the Community TWi
That worked a treat. Thank you very much. I can't
believe that this is not documented and easy to find
somewhere. I looked all over the place but found the
answer here thanks to you, anne.
Cheers,
Dan
--- Anne Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thursday 24 Mar 2005 17:50, DAN WALKER wrote:
>
On Thursday 24 Mar 2005 17:50, DAN WALKER wrote:
> Please excuse my newness...
>
> I tried to do the updates for my i686 machine, but it
> says that the website is uncontactable. Where can I
> find a list of update mirrors. I have googled but can
> not find any.
>
Hi, Dan. Open Mandrake Control Ce
Please excuse my newness...
I tried to do the updates for my i686 machine, but it
says that the website is uncontactable. Where can I
find a list of update mirrors. I have googled but can
not find any.
I tried to update using KDE's update thingy. Also
Mandrake Online cannot connect to its servers
At 09:06 PM 11/21/2004, you wrote:
On Sunday 21 November 2004 08:02 pm, JoeHill wrote:
>
>
> > I understood that internal addresses were never observable due to the
> > nature of internet addressing. Somebody enlighten us if I'm wrong.
>
> I was gonna say somethin', but I try not to embarass mysel
On Mon, 2004-11-22 at 08:02, JoeHill wrote:
[...snip]
> The question is, is Merlin using a dedicated firewall/router/NAT of some sort
> or
> not?
not that I know of.
It's a single machine connected to the net by dialup; I just installed
Mandrake 10.0 straight off the CDs. I don't recall any que
Dennis Myers wrote:
On Sunday 21 November 2004 02:19 pm, Merlin Zener wrote:
Hello,
someone sent me this site
http://www.auditmypc.com/
so I thought I'd have a look; I did the first firewall test and they
said:
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Notice!
Our system d
On Sunday 21 November 2004 08:02 pm, JoeHill wrote:
>
>
> > I understood that internal addresses were never observable due to the
> > nature of internet addressing. Somebody enlighten us if I'm wrong.
>
> I was gonna say somethin', but I try not to embarass myself with my
> cluelessness more than
On Sunday 21 November 2004 07:02 pm, JoeHill wrote:
> On Sun, 21 Nov 2004 18:07:32 -0600
>
> Dennis Myers disseminated the following:
> > > So what should I do about this?
> > > What's the difference between an internal and an external IP?
> > > And anyhow, I thought I had set my IP to 192.168.0.20
On Sun, 21 Nov 2004 18:07:32 -0600
Dennis Myers disseminated the following:
> > So what should I do about this?
> > What's the difference between an internal and an external IP?
> > And anyhow, I thought I had set my IP to 192.168.0.20???
> I understood that internal addresses were never observ
On Sunday 21 November 2004 02:19 pm, Merlin Zener wrote:
> Hello,
>
> someone sent me this site
> http://www.auditmypc.com/
>
> so I thought I'd have a look; I did the first firewall test and they
> said:
>
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> Notice!
>
> Our syst
Hello,
someone sent me this site
http://www.auditmypc.com/
so I thought I'd have a look; I did the first firewall test and they
said:
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Notice!
Our system detects your internal IP address as 203.172.36.52 and your
external addr
On Saturday 23 October 2004 18:15, Tom Brinkman wrote:
> On Friday 22 October 2004 06:30 pm, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
> > I just followed Tom's advice and upgraded to the present
> > cooker, including the (separate) install of the new kernel.
> > Everything seem to work perfectly. So, now I supposedly
On Friday 22 October 2004 06:30 pm, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
> I just followed Tom's advice and upgraded to the present
> cooker, including the (separate) install of the new kernel.
> Everything seem to work perfectly. So, now I supposedly run
> the upcoming 10.1 Official - right ?
Yes, and if
I just followed Tom's advice and upgraded to the present cooker,
including the (separate) install of the new kernel. Everything
seem to work perfectly. So, now I supposedly run the upcoming 10.1
Official - right ?
Just after that I received the usual alert from Mandrake about
security update
Stew Benedict wrote:
You currently see updates hitting community main? I was under the
impression that that is static atm. Went through this last night with a
support person and it looked like the hdlist on proxad was dated Sept15.
Thanks,
Well, I guess I didn't need to send Mandrake my $20
Margot wrote:
Stew Benedict wrote:
On Fri, 8 Oct 2004, Margot wrote:
For 10.1 Community, same as for 10.0 Community, there are *no*
'update' sources. Updates for Community are found in 'main', not in a
separate source.
Go to easyurpmi, select 10.1 Community sources for 'main', 'contrib',
'jpac
Stew Benedict wrote:
On Fri, 8 Oct 2004, Margot wrote:
For 10.1 Community, same as for 10.0 Community, there are *no*
'update' sources. Updates for Community are found in 'main', not in
a separate source.
Go to easyurpmi, select 10.1 Community sources for 'main',
'contrib', 'jpackage' and 'plf
On Friday 08 October 2004 09:24 am, Stew Benedict wrote:
> You currently see updates hitting community main? I was under the
> impression that that is static atm. Went through this last night with a
> support person and it looked like the hdlist on proxad was dated Sept15.
I haven't gotten any u
On Fri, 8 Oct 2004, Margot wrote:
> For 10.1 Community, same as for 10.0 Community, there are *no*
> 'update' sources. Updates for Community are found in 'main', not in
> a separate source.
>
> Go to easyurpmi, select 10.1 Community sources for 'main',
> 'contrib', 'jpackage' and 'plf'.
>
>
Matt Harrison wrote:
Hi all,
I am sure this has already been answered, but I
didn't have much luck with the archives. I am using
10.1 community currently and when I try to add a
security update source, it pops up telling me it is
impossible to add the source and that it is most
likely misconfig
Hi all,
I am sure this has already been answered, but I
didn't have much luck with the archives. I am using
10.1 community currently and when I try to add a
security update source, it pops up telling me it is
impossible to add the source and that it is most
likely misconfigured. Is there a pro
On Wednesday 07 July 2004 10:23 am, Justin Grote wrote:
> DG> I just started to receive security checks from my mandrake 10 system
> and here DG> is something I'm not sure I should be concerned with or not.
>
> DG> Security Warning: World Writable files found :
>
> DG> Is this normal ?
>
> Hi
Hi,
Is there only one source of security updates for
both Community & Official?
And if so can Community use that security updates too?
best rgds
~tt
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Join the
Thank you so much. I thought that was it but, did not want to blow it on
nthe first try.
Thank you for your help,
Steve
- Original Message -
From: "Derek Jennings" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, May 02, 2004 10:28 AM
Subject: Re: [new
On Sunday 02 May 2004 18:15, Steve wrote:
> Okay,
>
> Okay, my screen says:
>
> Mandrake Linux Release 10.0 (Community) for i586
> Kernel 2.6.3-4mdk on an i686 /tty1
>
> The kernel files available for download that look like they would match
> are:
>
> kernel-2.6.3.9mdk-1-1mdk.i586.rpm
> kernel-sou
,
Steve
- Original Message -
From: "Derek Jennings" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, May 02, 2004 9:47 AM
Subject: Re: [newbie] Security Advisory MDKSA-2004:037
> On Sunday 02 May 2004 17:34, Steve wrote:
> > I read this security adv
On Sunday 02 May 2004 17:34, Steve wrote:
> I read this security advisory and wanted to install the kernel update
> associated with it however, the advisory gives a list of about 20 rpm files
> for release 10.0. Do I install all of these? If not, how do I know which
> one(s) to install? The example
I read this security advisory and
wanted to install the kernel update associated with it however, the advisory
gives a list of about 20 rpm files for release 10.0. Do I install all of these?
If not, how do I know which one(s) to install? The example in the section on
doing kernel updates onl
On Sunday 18 April 2004 20:47, Anne Wilson wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On Sunday 18 April 2004 18:13, Owen Berio wrote:
> > The initial installations identified correctly my cd rom,
> > floppy, hard disc, etc. Most gratifying was xD card reader was
> > identified
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Sunday 18 April 2004 18:13, Owen Berio wrote:
>
> The initial installations identified correctly my cd rom, floppy,
> hard disc, etc. Most gratifying was xD card reader was identified as
> "mt/windows" and it worked. Opening sequence was
> "file/m
On Mon, 2004-04-19 at 03:13, Owen Berio wrote:
> I have just reinstalled the down load version of 9.2 for the fourth time.
> In the previous installations all appeared well until I installed the
> security updates.
>
> The initial installations identified correctly my cd rom, floppy, hard disc,
I have just reinstalled the down load version of 9.2 for the fourth time.
In the previous installations all appeared well until I installed the
security updates.
The initial installations identified correctly my cd rom, floppy, hard disc,
etc. Most gratifying was xD card reader was identified as
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Join the Club : http://www.mandrakeclub.com
Good morning all,
I've been distro-testing and had my eye caught by
MandrakeMove, which by all accounts seems to be an
excellent piece of work. I have some questions,
however, that haven't been answered by anything I've
read so far, so I'm hopeful that someone here will
know the answers...
1. Ca
Hi all
Can anybody recommend software for use with security cameras?
I have a 4-port card from conexant and would like to hook up 4 cameras with
24/7 recording.
TIA
Shaz
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Xfree doesn't work due to latest update on 9.1 box. Is there a way to
reload from the installation cd or another way to fix this? Would
appreciate any help in getting computer back up and running. I have gotten
familiar with the mandrake GUI and would prefer not to use xp.
Thanks
john
Want to b
On Thursday 24 July 2003 09:53 am, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
> On Thu, 2003-07-24 at 23:35, Aron Smith wrote:
> > On Thursday 24 July 2003 06:58 am, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
> > > On Thu, 2003-07-24 at 16:43, aron smith wrote:
> > > > I notice that now dmsg returns a unknown command
> > > > whats happining?
>
On Thu, 2003-07-24 at 23:35, Aron Smith wrote:
> On Thursday 24 July 2003 06:58 am, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
> > On Thu, 2003-07-24 at 16:43, aron smith wrote:
> > > I notice that now dmsg returns a unknown command
> > > whats happining?
> >
> > Are you typing "dmsg" or "dmesg" ?
> thanks was typing dms
On Thursday 24 July 2003 06:58 am, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
> On Thu, 2003-07-24 at 16:43, aron smith wrote:
> > I notice that now dmsg returns a unknown command
> > whats happining?
>
> Are you typing "dmsg" or "dmesg" ?
thanks was typing dmsg ..oops
anymore good commands to monitor system?
Want to b
On Thu, 2003-07-24 at 16:43, aron smith wrote:
> I notice that now dmsg returns a unknown command
> whats happining?
Are you typing "dmsg" or "dmesg" ?
--
Thu Jul 24 20:55:01 EST 2003
20:55:01 up 10 days, 12:58, 3 users, load average: 0.11, 0.18, 0.12
On Mon, 2003-06-30 at 21:45, Adolfo Bello wrote:
> Holiday? I use to know its meaning. :-(((
>
> 100% of my time in the last three weeks has been dedicated to prepare a
> bid for a large system.
>
> I'll be free again by the next week end.
>
> Saludos,
>
> Adolfo
Maybe I should move there. Go
On Sat, 2003-06-28 at 18:31, Stephen Kuhn wrote:
> On Sun, 2003-06-29 at 04:36, Adolfo Bello wrote:
> > Hi there:
> >
> > Users of vmware 4 for linux should take a look at the link below and see
> > how this can affect or compromise their machines:
> >
> > http://www.vmware.com/support/kb/enduser
On Sun, 2003-06-29 at 04:36, Adolfo Bello wrote:
> Hi there:
>
> Users of vmware 4 for linux should take a look at the link below and see
> how this can affect or compromise their machines:
>
> http://www.vmware.com/support/kb/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=1019
>
> Saludos,
>
> Adolfo
Hmmm...gla
Hi there:
Users of vmware 4 for linux should take a look at the link below and see
how this can affect or compromise their machines:
http://www.vmware.com/support/kb/enduser/std_adp.php?p_faqid=1019
Saludos,
Adolfo
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrak
http://www.seifried.org/lasg/index.html
This may have been posted in the past but I feel that it's something everyone
(newbie and experts) should read.. more now then ever!! If anyone knows of
other sites like this could they holla back with the url included..
I live in Japan and I'm pushing
manually in MCC software manager works OK
Look and thou shall find
From: Jerry Barton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [newbie] security update "corrupted package"
Date: Wed, 12 Feb 2003 06:31:07 -0700
On Sun, 09 Feb 200
On Sun, 09 Feb 2003 17:27:00 +0100
"ivette brusselmans" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> when security updating on
> ftp://mirrors.secsup.org/pub/linux/mandrake/Mandrake/updates/9.0/RPMS/
> I keep getting the message:
> package "samba-client-2.2.7-2.1mdk.i568.rpm" is corrupted.
> I tried
Hello,
when security updating on
ftp://mirrors.secsup.org/pub/linux/mandrake/Mandrake/updates/9.0/RPMS/
I keep getting the message:
package "samba-client-2.2.7-2.1mdk.i568.rpm" is corrupted.
I tried serveral other mirrors, same message.
cannot install any security updates
thanx
___
On Tue, 2003-01-14 at 23:17, Rifza Adriansyah wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On Sunday 12 January 2003 06:19 pm, Derek Jennings wrote:
> > Alternatively if you are more comfortable with GUIs, then
> > firestarter is a nice GUI front end to iptables which is a lot like
> On Sunday 12 January 2003 06:19 pm, Derek Jennings wrote:
> > Alternatively if you are more comfortable with GUIs, then
> > firestarter is a nice GUI front end to iptables which is a lot like
> > ZoneAlarm for Windows. Firestarter is less powerful than shorewall,
> > but easier for newbies to re
On Sun, 2003-01-12 at 19:57, Rifza Adriansyah wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Greetings,
> Are there security audit websites for linux like grc.com ?. Is
> iptables enough for linux home user ?. Thanks for your help.
> - --
> Rifza Adriansyah
>
I think you'll find
>
> Greetings,
> Are there security audit websites for linux like grc.com ?. Is
> iptables enough for linux home user ?. Thanks for your help.
> - --
> Rifza Adriansyah
You can use grc.com There is nothing OS specific about it.
However grc.com does not do a particularly efficient scan. For a mor
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Greetings,
Are there security audit websites for linux like grc.com ?. Is
iptables enough for linux home user ?. Thanks for your help.
- --
Rifza Adriansyah
Are you using GnuPG ?
Find my public key at http://belgium.keyserver.net
-BEGIN PGP SIGN
At 09:22 AM 10/17/2002 -0700, you wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Thursday 17 October 2002 11:55 am, Mark Weaver did speak unto the huddled
masses, saying:
> "old" P1-90Mhz machines out there for the asking. Get hold of one and
> make a real firewall. You can get a Gatewa
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Thursday 17 October 2002 11:55 am, Mark Weaver did speak unto the huddled
masses, saying:
> "old" P1-90Mhz machines out there for the asking. Get hold of one and
> make a real firewall. You can get a Gateway/firewall setup and
> functioning well o
On Thursday 17 October 2002 05:32 pm, FemmeFatale wrote:
> At 02:55 PM 10/17/2002 -0400, you wrote:
> >I must heartliy disagree here. If you're going to be connected via DSL or
> >Cable connection the only prudent thing to do is errect a "real" firewall.
Agreed.
[snip]
> heh And i'm not stupid.
At 02:55 PM 10/17/2002 -0400, you wrote:
I must heartliy disagree here. If you're going to be connected via DSL or
Cable connection the only prudent thing to do is errect a "real" firewall.
With the price of New PC's being in the moderate price range of 500 - 700
dollars for a fair system, the
At 02:55 PM 10/17/2002 -0400, you wrote:
I must heartliy disagree here. If you're going to be connected via DSL or
Cable connection the only prudent thing to do is errect a "real" firewall.
With the price of New PC's being in the moderate price range of 500 - 700
dollars for a fair system, the
The description at leaf says, "it's primarily used as a gateway/
router/firewall for Internet leaf sites." What's a leaf site?
Miark
Derek Jennings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> saith:
> On Thursday 17 Oct 2002 7:55 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
>
> If you have a *really* old spare computer, I recommend the LE
On Thursday 17 Oct 2002 7:55 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
> Piero Piutti wrote:
> > On Monday 14 October 2002 21:08, Eric S. Dye wrote:
> >>another good firewall program
> >>that i use is the black ice program and of course norton sells a good one
> >>as well. i wouldn't worry about broadcasting your I P
Michael Adams wrote:
Hands up all those that have had major isues trying to uninstall "Bonzai
Buddy" from computers when it had been inadvertently downloaded. This would
be a lot less of a problem in Linux even if the buddy came in an RPM.
heh! :) well...you could always convert the source cod
Piero Piutti wrote:
On Monday 14 October 2002 21:08, Eric S. Dye wrote:
another good firewall program
that i use is the black ice program and of course norton sells a good one
as well. i wouldn't worry about broadcasting your I P address, but if you
do a lot of surfing, you should consider a fi
> Richard, I don't use a dial up setup but did have fierewall issues
> initally with 9.0.
Thanks for your reply, when I get back to the machine I'll give your
suggestion a try.
You seem to be on an ethernet feed from a cable modem? I have an
(unconnected) ethernet NIC in the machine. If this wa
On Thursday October 17 2002 03:46 am, Richard Urwin wrote:
> Hi,
>
> OK, I'm a newbie at MDK 9.0 i586 of 5 hours standing.
>
> I installed at the "higher" security setting.
It's a good idea, specially with a new install (or upgrade) to set
the minimum security level. Then move up later if a
Richard, I don't use a dial up setup but did have fierewall issues
initally with 9.0. I uninstalled all the stock firewall tools,
shorewall, and didn't use the control center "drake" tools either.
instead, I downloaded firestarter and use it. it is very easy for a
newbie, and actually works. it
On Mon, 2002-10-14 at 21:50, FemmeFatale wrote:
>
> For windows both norton & blackice bite the bikey. Plain & simple. If you
> want proof I Can direct you off or on list to a website.
>
> Zonealarm is the only software firewall for Winblows i personally trust.
>
> *Dons her tinfoil hat* :)
, then
perhaps the chaos you long for will ensue... :-)
rgds
Frank
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of RichardA
Sent: Wednesday, 16 October 2002 4:32 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Re[2]: [newbie] Security alert
Roman Korcek, Tuesday 15
Roman Korcek, Tuesday 15 October 2002 11:47:
> Hi,
>
> >>if you still think that Black Ice Defender is a good firewall have a look
> >> at this website http://www.grc.com and see what results it had when
> >> tested.
> >>
> >>having BID installed on your windowz machine can be even worse that
> >>
On Monday October 14 2002 04:23 pm, Franki wrote:
> other then that, don't worry about it, head over to grc.com and run
> shields up to see
> if you have anything open.. (its not a great scanner, but better then
> nothing.)
> Frank
Shields up is a fairly easy test to pass. The security pr
Hi,
>>if you still think that Black Ice Defender is a good firewall have a look at
>>this website http://www.grc.com and see what results it had when tested.
>>
>>having BID installed on your windowz machine can be even worse that having no
>>firewall at all (i.e. false sense of security). when y
i did indeed go to the site below and my Black Ice Defender proved
completely stealthy. thank you..
eric
At 09:03 AM 10/15/2002 +, you wrote:
>On Monday 14 October 2002 21:08, Eric S. Dye wrote:
>
> > another good firewall program
> > that i use is the black ice program and of cour
.
luckily, thats just something else for win users to worry about.
rgds
Frank
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of E T
Sent: Tuesday, 15 October 2002 7:10 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [newbie] Security alert
ever seen the "b
Hands up all those that have had major isues trying to uninstall "Bonzai
Buddy" from computers when it had been inadvertently downloaded. This would
be a lot less of a problem in Linux even if the buddy came in an RPM.
On Tue, 15 Oct 2002 12:09, E T wrote:
> ever seen the "bonzi buddie" as parr
> For windows both norton & blackice bite the bikey. Plain & simple. If you
> want proof I Can direct you off or on list to a website.
Ooops! please do, Femme! i'm interested!
thanks IA.
Damian
--
Damian
--
"Share your knowledge. It is a way to achieve immortality."(The Dalai Lama)
Wan
At 02:08 PM 10/14/2002 -0700, you wrote:
>Hello Marco,
>
>Your message came from the www.bonzi.com site. They sell a program called
>Internet Alert which is a great firewall program, however i don't know if
>it would work with Linux. I have the Bonzi program myself, but i use it on
>XP. if you
ever seen the "bonzi buddie" as parrot like the paperclip in m$oriface, that
was free, but better spyware than doubleclick could buy. same folks, I would
wonder about the firewall and weither it was spyware too.
On Monday 14 October 2002 05:30 am, shane wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE--
Marco Verheul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Thanks all, I got the picture. I'll stick with Jim's suggestion to
> uncheck that option in Mozilla for unwanted popups and let the matter
> rest.
If you are curious, try running nmapfe. nmap is a scanning tool - it
will tell you what ports on your mac
On Mon, 14 Oct 2002 14:23:44 -0700
"Eric S. Dye" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> the site is not bogus. they do have a good firewall called Internet
> Alert
I do not care what the product is or how good it is.
Anyone who markets their product in this manner, which is at the very
least is deceptive
On Monday 14 October 2002 01:46 pm, you wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I was just surfing the internet when I got a security alert, stating
> that I am broadcasting an IP address and that my PC could be getting
> unwanted visitors. I was directed to the following link:
>
> http://images.bonzi.com/fastclick/i
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Monday 14 October 2002 1:46 pm, Marco Verheul did speak unto the huddled
masses, saying:
> I was just surfing the internet when I got a security alert, stating
> that I am broadcasting an IP address and that my PC could be getting
> unwanted visi
Thanks all, I got the picture. I'll stick with Jim's suggestion to
uncheck that option in Mozilla for unwanted popups and let the matter
rest.
Regards, Marco
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Marco Verheul
Sent: Tuesday, 15 October 2002 4:46 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [newbie] Security alert
Hello,
I was just surfing the internet when I got a security alert, stating
that I am broadcasting an IP address and that my PC could be getting
unwanted visitors.
the site is not bogus. they do have a good firewall called Internet Alert
which does in fact work. however, i doubt that it would work with Linux.
not sure though. there are places where you can test your security online.
if anyone wants to know the address, let me know.
Eric S. Dye
At 05:0
On 14 Oct 2002 22:46:04 +0200
Marco Verheul <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is this a clever way to sell some product or is this for real.
If you buy this let me know, I've got a pile of stuff that I've been
trying to get rid of.
It just like the bogus security sites that say they can see the cont
Hello Marco,
Your message came from the www.bonzi.com site. They sell a program called
Internet Alert which is a great firewall program, however i don't know if
it would work with Linux. I have the Bonzi program myself, but i use it on
XP. if you want a free firewall program, you can go to www
Marco,
I'm not positive what you saw, but it sounds like you got a pop-up
message from some web site trying to sell you something. An
advertisement or something. 1) I would not worry about it. 2) I would
turn off pop-up windows.
In mozilla go to Edit -> Preferences, then under A
Hello,
I was just surfing the internet when I got a security alert, stating
that I am broadcasting an IP address and that my PC could be getting
unwanted visitors. I was directed to the following link:
http://images.bonzi.com/fastclick/ia9b2.asp
Is this a clever way to sell some product or is t
I found this somewhat amusing. OK; I laughed my a$$ off. Gummi bears?
http://www.counterpane.com/crypto-gram-0205.html#5
Isn't identity theft from paper trails bad enough? Now we'll all have to wear
surgical gloves to prevent ID theft through fingerprints?
Just be careful where you dispose of
I noticed the same thing. I currently have mine set at high. With higher or
paranoid I first have to login in as a regular user and su to root. However I
can still login into webmin, ssh etc... into my box as root.
-Jay
Quoting Brian York <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> When you install a fresh copy
When you install a fresh copy of LM 8.2 and you set it to 'higher'
security through the installation you can get different sequrity options
for the users and for the system. When i tried this a few weeks back i
could not login directly as root (sure that was because of the
configuration) so
On Sun, 17 Mar 2002 20:21:41 -0500
Chris Keelan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> studiouisly spake these words to ponder:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Dateline: Sun, 17 Mar 2002 17:04:53 -0800 (PST): laying low until the
> bleeding stops, Ron Bouwhuis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> transmits:
>
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Dateline: Sun, 17 Mar 2002 17:04:53 -0800 (PST): laying low until the
bleeding stops, Ron Bouwhuis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> transmits:
> Poor password choice - especially for key UIDs such as
> root - are the true Archilles Heel of *all* systems,
> regard
Richard,
Key words in the article, IMO are:
"To exploit the vulnerability an attacker would still
need to guess the correct X-Windows password, but
given the lame passwords many users pick this is
hardly a high enough barrier."
Poor password choice - especially for key UIDs such as
root - are
On Sunday 17 March 2002 14:55, RichardA opened a hailing frequency and
transmitted:
> The Register says MDK 8 & 8.1 will let anyone who can guess the root
> password log in to any online box:
> http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/55/24447.html
> The relevant text in the linked to page is :
yet
The Register says MDK 8 & 8.1 will let anyone who can guess the root password
log in to any online box:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/55/24447.html
The relevant text in the linked to page is :
LINUX
1. Login as root.
2. Open /etc/X11/kdm/Xaccess in editor.
3. Comment out the following two
db wrote:
>
> I am new to Mandrake and Linux. During the install I setup the "tiny
> firewall" and changed the Security level to Medium. Upon revisting the
> security section (thru the KDE interface) twice since, it tells me that the
> firewall is in place but each time following a reboot the
I am new to Mandrake and Linux. During the install I setup the "tiny
firewall" and changed the Security level to Medium. Upon revisting the
security section (thru the KDE interface) twice since, it tells me that the
firewall is in place but each time following a reboot the security level
seems
On Friday 25 January 2002 15:38, you wrote:
> I have bastille configured for medium security and just ran the 'who'
> command and found two users logged in.
> Being that I am the sole user, it seems that there are other things I sould
> be doing to harden the system.
> I'm used to Zone Alarm notif
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