And ... the Linux is Red Hat.

On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 6:43 AM, Joseph Kern <joseph.a.k...@gmail.com> wrote:
> OTP in 5 minutes? I think it would take at least 10 to explain how they work 
> ...
> In this case. If only servers are "in-play" then the keys are secure
> on the laptops "out-of-play".
> Yeah I'm splitting hairs, but rules are rules :-)
>
> And the instructor (not me) who's running this mis-heard the
> requirements. It's not "Zen Linux" it's "Zen Cart running on Linux".
> Anyone have tips on securing Zen Cart? I have a bad feeling about this ...
>
>
> On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 12:42 AM, John H. Robinson, IV <jh...@ucsd.edu> wrote:
>> da...@lang.hm wrote:
>>>
>>> The real answer in production is to use a token authentication that is not
>>> accessable to someone who hacks the client machine, but this is a game
>>> where such infrastructure is not feasible.
>>
>> But OTP via OPIE is certainly doable.
>>
>> --
>> John H. Robinson, IV          jh...@ucsd.edu
>>                                                                 http  ((((
>> WARNING: I cannot be held responsible for the above,         sbih.org ( )(:[
>> as apparently my cats have learned how to type.          spiders.html  ((((
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>

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