It seems like on Tue, Jul 04, 2000 at 04:15:15PM -0700, The Wolf scribbled: Orig Msg> I have been using Mandrake for quite some time. Orig Msg> Orig Msg> But since they have been pronounced the easiest Orig Msg> distro to break into I would like to know what Orig Msg> would be the hardest dirstro to break in. Orig Msg> Orig Msg> Orig Msg> -- Orig Msg> The Wolf You are asking the wrong question. Even OpenBSD which is touted as secure out of the box has CERT advisories that mention it that come out once or twice a year. There are no guarantees against buffer overflow attacks. There are no guarantees against backdoors or Trojans. There is no such thing as a secure system. Security is not a "fire and forget" operation. Security takes constant vigilance, planning, and learning. MagusNet, Inc. firewall rules and configs are constantly reconfigured based on attack signatures for each day. Every part of my hybrid firewall config is custom and looks nothing like what would come out of any distribution. There is no way *any* vanilla distro could account for the number and types of attacks I see in a 24 hour period due to running a Public Proxy. For the record I haven't had any system I personally connected to the Internet get compromised over the last 3 years, that tells me I am due, not that I am better than the crackers. The most secure distro is the one you set up and test for yourself for the paticular requirements of your network. The hardest system to break into is the one that provides the least amount of services to attack and causes the most amount of time to be wasted during the attack. It has to be constantly monitored and dynamic enuff to change as the threat changes. Its kinda like car theft, make your system least likely to be attacked by installing the tools to make the life of a cracker miserable and frustrating. Script Kiddies need not apply. All of the above are concerns no matter what distro or Operating System you happen to be running. If anything the distro is irrelevent. If you are waiting for someone else to do it for you, you will be waiting a long time. Jean Francois Sends... President & CEO - MagusNet, Inc., MagusNet.com, MagusNet.Gilbert.AZ.US Director Of Managed Services - OpNIX,Inc., www.opnix.com OpNIX - Simply Better Bandwidth 602-770-JLF1 - Cellular, ICQ: 8137851 From " linuxnet"@home.com Mon Jul 3 06:11:29 2000 From: " linuxnet"@home.com (colin rasor) Date: Sun, 02 Jul 2000 23:11:29 -0700 Subject: E-mail and Cox References: <000a01bfe498$7f0d4040$e8a30618@phnx1.az.home.com> Message-ID: <39602E91.66D25629@home.com> This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------A71BC63219FCCDCEA3808C9B Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="------------F62A75A6DD560BDDD243AEA6" --------------F62A75A6DD560BDDD243AEA6 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit David Demland wrote: > Does any know now to get "mail-client" to talk to Cox e-mail. I have > set everything up like on the PC and I keep getting an error message > that a host can not be found. Any ideas? David David, Here is what I did. Guy comes out installs cable modem *on windows box* Colin gets dhcp working on his *linux firewall* Colin fires up dhclient on firewall and connects to internet Colin runs tcpdump to look at the pop3 requests made buy the *windows box*(after typing the server name mail\) Colin enters gained ip addresse into mailer of choice on workstation. Please keep in mind this only works if you have a account set up with them. Either through the web or through technical service. Hope this helps! --------------F62A75A6DD560BDDD243AEA6 Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit David Demland wrote:
Does any know now to get "mail-client" to talk to Cox e-mail. I have set everything up like on the PC and I keep getting an error message that a host can not be found. Any ideas? David
David,
 Here is what I did.
Guy comes out installs cable modem *on windows box*
 Colin gets dhcp working on his *linux firewall*
 Colin fires up dhclient on firewall and connects to internet
 Colin runs tcpdump to look at the pop3 requests made buy the *windows box*(after typing the server name mail\)
 Colin enters gained ip addresse into mailer of choice on workstation.

Please keep in mind this only works if you have a account set up with them. Either through the web or through technical service.
 Hope this helps!
  --------------F62A75A6DD560BDDD243AEA6-- --------------A71BC63219FCCDCEA3808C9B Content-Type: text/x-vcard; charset=us-ascii; name=" linuxnet.vcf" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Description: Card for colin rasor Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=" linuxnet.vcf" begin:vcard n:Rasor;Colin tel;work:6023040299 x-mozilla-html:FALSE url:http://www.specializedmillwork.com org:http://www.specializedmillwork.com;IS version:2.1 email;internet:linuxnet@home.com adr;quoted-printable:;; 1918 S. VanBurean st. =0D=0A=0D=0A=0D=0A;Phoenix;AZ;85010;United States of America x-mozilla-cpt:;2 fn:Colin Rasor end:vcard --------------A71BC63219FCCDCEA3808C9B--