On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, Ariel Biener wrote:
On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, Stephen J. Wilcox wrote:
*ponder*
But who said I am not on your network ? What if I penetrated your AAA server, or, some other server on your network ?
if this is done, you may well already be f*cked, but not neccessarily because of "sniffing" or "injecting ARP entries", all of which can be prevented by a decent switch with VLANs, and for more protection, static port ARP entries.
And what about those that administer their networks from remote locations
how will that work, you're not on my network and my routers wont forward local packets to you?
Steve
On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, Ariel Biener wrote:
On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, Stephen J. Wilcox wrote:
paranoia on people sniffing tho!
Hmmm, how about I inject an arp entry into your workstation, and redirect your traffic to where I want ?
...
--Ariel
Steve
On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, fingers wrote:
Hi
Hello All ,I have charged myself with trying to find a statistic on how many individuals responsible for IP core equipment recommend telnet or ssh & why particularly .I will summarize .
telnet is cleartext, that should be reason enough...
--Rob
-- Stephen J. Wilcox IP Services Manager, Opal Telecom http://www.opaltelecom.co.uk/ Tel: 0161 222 2000 Fax: 0161 222 2008
-- Ariel Biener e-mail: ariel@post.tau.ac.il PGP(6.5.8) public key http://www.tau.ac.il/~ariel/pgp.html
-- Stephen J. Wilcox IP Services Manager, Opal Telecom http://www.opaltelecom.co.uk/ Tel: 0161 222 2000 Fax: 0161 222 2008
-- Ariel Biener e-mail: ariel@post.tau.ac.il PGP(6.5.8) public key http://www.tau.ac.il/~ariel/pgp.html
James Smallacombe PlantageNet, Inc. CEO and Janitor up@3.am http://3.am =========================================================================