Am 04. Jan, 2003 schw=E4tzte Gary Nichols so: > That's a hornet's nest I don't even want to touch. ;-) > The baseline is that you have to prevent any ->unauthorized <- access > to your systems. > For example, if you have a contract with IBM that grants them access to > dial-in via SecureID to work on your machines, then that's fine - it's > authorized - however you also have to have a 3rd party agreement with > them stating such and assigning responsibilities, damages, etc. This > is a topic all in itself. *blah* It's also something that doesn't happen with the m$ license, which is all one-sided. > > Does it approve transmission accross 3rd party networks? > > > > Yes - I assume you mean a private point-to-point private network > connection. Provided of course that you can prove that you have > adequate safeguards in place on both ends. On such a connection, > encryption is not required. Actually, I mean transmission across someone else's network, e.g. VPN over the Net. It also means something like a leased t1 to a leased t1 where the ISP has access to the data as it goes across the ISP's system. > > And if the wireless is tunneled using the approved encryption standard? > > It's not so much that it's encrypted over the spectrum, it's that the > spectrum isn't approved. At least that's the problem I'm having. So tunnelling across the Internet is OK, but tunnelling over 802.11 isn't? > > Is it a decent encryption standard? > > Depends on your interpretation of 'decent'. Not the "cracked 4 hours after its release m$ vpn". > Even more interesting is that ANY phi that leaves your network over a > public network has to be encrypted - that includes web., ftp, telnet, > smtp... etc. This is forcing a lot of companies to have a "hello > Jesus" with security finally. The industry is moving towards https, > sftp, ssh and pki-based solutions. Cool. > Again, this is a good thing - I just hope that they enforce it. I definitely want them to do so. thanks for the answers, der.hans --=20 # https://www.LuftHans.com/ http://www.TOLISGroup.com/ # Motorraeder toeten nicht. Motorraeder werden getoetet.