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Date:      Sun, 17 Apr 2005 08:14:31 -0700
From:      "greg@grokking.org" <greg@grokking.org>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: messages from dhclient
Message-ID:  <1113750871.9286.7.camel@chomsky.sohotech.ca>
In-Reply-To: <200504171703.46362.joost@amiculus.com>
References:  <200504171304.48447.joost@amiculus.com> <200504171551.11050.joost@amiculus.com> <20050417143512.GA44874@slackbox.xs4all.nl> <200504171703.46362.joost@amiculus.com>

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On Sun, 2005-04-17 at 17:03 +0200, Joost van Dijk wrote:
> > Don't turn off the firewall.
> > etc...
> 
> > Depends on what your network configuration is. If you are sitting behind
> > an ethernet ADSL router, you're probably OK, since those usually come
> > with a firewell and NAT built-in. If you don't have one of those, you
> > would be wise to firewall all the systems that are in direct contact
> > with the Internet. IMHO making an unfirewalled box directly accessibly
> > from the internet is an accident waiting to happen.
> > 
> > If you cannot set up a firewall, at least disable all unneeded
> > services. E.g. disable sendmail if you don't need it. That will minimize
> > the chances of your boxen being h4x0r3d. :-)
> 
> Roland and Bob
> 
> I have glass fiber (100 MB/sec) that comes through one router which is not a 
> NAT and has no firewall built in. I have been told that this is one hop from 
> the backbone. I have attached the glass fiber to a modem, which gives me 
> eight 10 MB/sec ethernet outlets. The modem is dumb and contains no firewall. 
> That puts my computer two unprotected hops from the backbone (if I understand 
> this correctly). 
> 
> One could say that I am exposed, without risking great exaggeration. But that 
> doesn't matter, because there is really nothing on the machine. I am only 
> using it to learn on.


Hate to be the one to break it to you but YOUR privacy is probably the
least important concern (though I mean no offence by this statement). If
you have this kind of connectivity, I'd be more concerned with what a
potential attacker could do to OTHERS using YOUR compromised host. Also,
you should be picking up on the potential legal ramifications suggested
by this...



> 
> What does IMHO mean?


In My Humble Opinion.


> 
> What does h4x0r3d mean?


It's script-kiddie jargon for "hacked" (i.e. compromised, in more polite
terms).

G



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