Or it could also have been of a legitimate corporate need, as im used to
seeing. So when its not blatently obvious, where do you draw that line
?? Nothing i read here in the replies is any different then you could
find doing a little bit of googling on the web
On Thu, 2003-06-12 at 13:03,
That would be true if he used the Yahoo Messenger, Lets take this a step
further though, say he isnt using the messenger client, your only hope
then to locate said id is from the browser cache, or a caching
proxy. your chance could provide result with a recursive search
through the cache for
you guys are lurking where the MicroBSD project is already cutting a
path.
On Tue, 2002-11-26 at 14:40, Ray Slakinski wrote:
Could this not be part of the login script that unpacks a gpg file on
login? The only issue is re-packing the information, and removing all
files put the encrypted
Well if you look at http://www.microbsd.net you'll find an ISO to download and
you can install it on a 386/486, it supports 802.11 and has IPSec VPN
support, at the moment there isnt a GUI so its a command line configuration.
It a fork of OpenBSD, and a new release is due up in a few hours.
Hrmmm I thought they fixed that in X, Well at least under *BSD they did,
what version of XFree is mandrake using these days???
On Thu, 2002-02-21 at 12:24, sege wrote:
Hello Folks:
I am running Mandrake Linux 8.1, and I am trying to stop X from listening 0n
port 6000. Any hint on how to do
Secure Internet Live conferencing
http://silcnet.org/
Features
- Normal conferencing services such as private messages, channels,
channel messages, etc. All traffic is secured and authenticated.
- No unique nicknames. There can be same nicknames in SILC without
collisions. SILC has unique