@home started scanning their customers for open NNTP proxies (mostly machines running misconfigured WinGate proxies) after they came >< close to getting UDP'ed. Their response to Code Red seems to have been limited to blocking port 80 to their cable modem customers (running a web server on a cable modem is a violation of their AUP, but until now it was only enforced in egregious cases). -C On Thu, Aug 09, 2001 at 12:39:59AM -0400, Christian Kuhtz wrote:
Another couple of points...
Do you guys scan your customers? If so, what for? OS scans? Specific threats? Infections? How do you handle this in your AUP? Have you had problems with it? What sort of problems have you had and how did you handle them?
How do you guys deal with NIDS at multi-Gbps rates?
-- Christian Kuhtz <ck@arch.bellsouth.net> -wk, <ck@gnu.org> -hm Sr. Architect, Engineering & Architecture, BellSouth.net, Atlanta, GA, U.S. "I speak for myself only."
-- --------------------------- Christopher A. Woodfield rekoil@semihuman.com PGP Public Key: http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0xB887618B