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Date:      Mon, 28 Jul 2008 14:24:56 -0400
From:      kalin m <mail@godfur.com>
To:        ross.cameron@linuxpro.co.za
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: pci compliance
Message-ID:  <488E0EF8.4030305@godfur.com>
In-Reply-To: <35f70db10807281102q5a0b73c3h554338292e3b751a@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <488E0708.2060207@godfur.com> <35f70db10807281102q5a0b73c3h554338292e3b751a@mail.gmail.com>

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cool. thanks. i couldn't find anything on google under that name but 
i've been looking and reading on a lot of documentation on line and print.
so i was just asking if there are any things that pertain in particular 
to the freebsd os that need to be addressed before the scanning.

how full of a penetration can you have if (almost) all incoming ports 
are blocked?

thanks....



Ross Cameron wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 28, 2008 at 7:51 PM, kalin m <mail@godfur.com> wrote:
>
>   
>> hi all...
>>
>> i'm about to submit a freebsd system to be scanned for pci compliance...
>>
>> is there any particular gotchas with bsd systems that can be detected at
>> the time of pci compliance scanning?
>> i know they use something like nmap if not nmap itself and i did myself on
>> that machine and didn't find anything interesting.
>> but one of the consultants that was 'advising' the company i work for said
>> "we use similar (as in nmap) approach but it's (much) more intrusive".
>> anybody knows what does that mean?
>>
>> thanks...
>>     
>
>
> The PCI auditing process is a full penetration test.
>     It's very thorough and not at all easy to pass.
>
> Get hold of a copy of "The penetration tester's handbook" and make sure u
> pass all the tests in the book and u should be ok
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