Web Kracked wrote: > James Knott wrote: >> Microsoft has little to do with this issue. Any operating system used >> in a corporate network environment has to support permissions in some >> manner. This means the system administrator can allow or deny a wide >> variety of things. >> > I still remember my permission info, and got a refresher when I > started with > web pages and in the old days I had to set my own permissions of the files > that I placed in the net, after I placed them on the net. > > But can you really can deny by file type extension? or by name, or a > naughty or nice list? > > Well, they can do almost anything these days, plus I forgot (thank the > stroke) > most of my NT server and security stuff. > > So, they can exclude all executable files from being added or executed > if they are not on their white list? or are on their black list? >
I don't know about by file extension, but certainly executables can be blocked in general. So, if a directory doesn't allow execute, then the executables it contains will not run, as they're blocked from doing so by the OS. -- Use OpenOffice.org <http://www.openoffice.org> --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
