Hi Benjamin,
Le 20/10/2017 à 04:14, Benjamin Kaduk a écrit :
Alas, it is left that way all too often. Since we're on the topic, I'll link
http://web.mit.edu/kerberos/krb5-latest/doc/admin/install.html
and note that that is quite different from the Heimdal included in the
FreeBSD base system.
Hi Walter,
Le 18/10/2017 à 22:52, Walter Parker a écrit :
> SMB has supported authentication signing for a long time (more than a
> decade). That can be used for basic security.
> SMB3 supports encryption. To work with SMB3 encryption you will need
> at least Windows 8.
> The Samba project suppor
Hi Benjamin,
Le 19/10/2017 à 00:43, Benjamin Kaduk a écrit :
NFS has no built-in encryption, it may be possible to tunnel it but this
is out-of-scope here (using a VPN and tunnel everything would be easier
than nitpicking and tunnel only the NFS data flow).
This statement is either false or hi
Hi Ronald,
Le 18/10/2017 à 06:00, Ronald F. Guilmette a écrit :
>
> In message <49252eda-3d48-f7bc-95e7-db716db4e...@whitewinterwolf.com>,
> "WhiteWinterWolf (Simon)" wrote:
>
>> Ideally, you would use a specific protection for each of these layers,
>>
Hi Karl,
Le 17/10/2017 à 04:24, Karl Denninger a écrit :
> Please understand that if you can get an AP to hand you a zero'd key
> (with an intentionally "weak" client) THEN THAT PERSON JUST BECAME
> ABLE TO ATTACH TO YOUR NETWORK AS AN AUTHORIZED USER.
As per my understanding, this attack only a
Hi Ronald,
I have yet to investigate this WPA2 thing on my side, too much
contradictory informations depending on the sources yet.
Let me however add my two cents regarding your issue:
A network can be divided in several logical layers: the data link layer
(here WiFi), the networking layer (
Hi Julian,
You don't need microscopic chips or highly engineered devices to
implement a working BadUSB attack.
Nothing looks more as a Dell mouse than another Dell mouse, and a
malicious mouse offers plenty of space to store all the chips you may
want. USB sticks are also still widely found
AFFECTED PRODUCTS
This issue affects FreeBSD from 7.0 to 10.3 included.
DESCRIPTION
FreeBSD jail incompletely protects the access to the IPC primitives.
The 'allow.sysvipc' setting only affects IPC queues, leaving other IPC
objects unprotected, making them reachable system-wide independently