Hello:
I am in the process of getting a debian server in the high school that I teach in. The network admin is concerned about the security of the exsisting Novell Server, border manager, etc. Our ISP is very picky about not hogging more bandwidth than we are suppossed to use. I have been carefully pushing for a debian linux server for about 3 years and now I am very close to getting one for my students to program on. The network admin is the last person I need to sign off on.... Below is a message from him, that I need to reply to in order for him to sanction the machine. I would like some help in creating a reponse to sooth his anxiety and fears. ********************************************** I have described the Linux project, its uses, and its physical placement within our network, to four knowledgeable people, and asked for their thoughts and recommendations. A. Partner in a consulting company based in Hunterdon County. Their mission is to encourage Linux use in small/medium companies. B. Lt. Col. (ret.) USAF, now a contractor for the Air Force (process compliance and Unix network administrator) C. Network technician. This person builds wide-area networks for corporations and financial institutions D. Computer consultant. This person has extensive employment experience (programming, documentation, database, networking) with HP, Agilent, and others. Husband and brother also do design work for top computer firms. They all insisted that a dedicated firewall is a requirement. They are unanimous in their exhortation that the server be properly secured. "B" gave specific items to examine in this regard, and "A" offered to scan it from inside and outside our building. "A," "B," and "C" state that, even if it IS properly secured, this does not prevent some types of malicious behavior. "A" and "B" think that the risk is no greater than our current setup, while "C" has reservations that we should not increase our susceptibility, and that the 24-hour availability of this server leaves us open to mischief. I share "C"'s concern. In-school computer use is subject to various controls, not the least of which is teacher oversight. By design, a publicly accessible server on which students can run their own programs at 3 a.m. lacks this important security. In light of this last point, let me pose a situation: A student loads and runs a program onto this Linux server which then launches attacks on other computers or routers on the Internet. Such attacks could be as simple as participating in a Denial-of-Service attack. In our earlier meeting, you said that proper settings, permissions, and restrictions could prevent that. Since this is one of the situations for which I am most concerned, can you give me (in excruciating detail) the steps which would prevent this? ====================================================================== Brian R. Furry [EMAIL PROTECTED] ============== =============== The Power of Open Source can only give the people what they so richly deserve ... stable and flexible computing ================ =============== Debian/GNU Linux www.debian.org ======================================================================= -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]