You can also disable telnet access using hosts.allow and hosts.deny, that way you can make it so that you can still use telnet from your LAN but no one can use telnet to log-on from outside the LAN.
Ron On Wed, 26 Apr 2000, Andrei Ivanov wrote: > If you know which user they logged in as, they can look up the > ~/.bash_history file for that user for some hints. Other than > that...install tripwire and you'll be sure when someone changes your > binaries. You can also disable telnetd in /etc/inetd.conf so noone can > telnet to you, and use ssh instead. > HTH, > Andrei > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Andrei S. Ivanov > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://arhses.dyndns.org -| > http://scorpio.dynodns.net -| > http://scorpio.myip.org -| <--All the pages bundled together. > UIN 12402354 > > For GPG key, go to above URL/GnuPG > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null >