We lost a cabinet in this about 25 minutes ago, anyone else effected?
--
Jeffrey Lyon, Leadership Team
jeffrey.l...@blacklotus.net | http://www.blacklotus.net
Black Lotus Communications of The IRC Company, Inc.
Follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/ddosprotection to find out
about news, pro
cards and tokens are a proxy for the use of a certificate authentication
system...
You can in fact do certificate auth without the use of cards or tokens
or mix and match physical tokens and other private key storage depending
on need with the same authentication backend (typically ldap).
Since t
is there a freebsd pam tacacs+ hack?
randy
On Sat, Nov 21, 2009 at 6:38 AM, John Levine wrote:
> > Are passwords still the only lowest-common-denominator?
>
> There's OpenID, where a provider can use any verification process it
> wants, but all the OpenID providers I know use ordinary passwords.
>
http://yubico.com/developers/openid/
I'
On Fri, 20 Nov 2009 18:31:53 -0500, Jared Mauch wrote:
> I will correct this later.
I saw that the FAQ is updated but maybe there is one small thing left
to correct? When I add a zone and give an IPv6 address as the master
IP it just says "Unable to axfr that domain from that IP." and no
connectio
On Sat, Nov 21, 2009 at 3:01 PM, Thom Hooker wrote:
> Hi
>
> Could a Yahoo! mail admin contact me off-list please?
>
> We have been getting "421 Temporarily deferred" messages from Yahoo! for
> the past 48 hours with no signs of any improvement (despite filling out
> their forms) and an ever growi
Hi
Could a Yahoo! mail admin contact me off-list please?
We have been getting "421 Temporarily deferred" messages from Yahoo! for
the past 48 hours with no signs of any improvement (despite filling out
their forms) and an ever growing outbound queue.
Thanks
Thom
SMX Ltd
http://smxemail.com
On Sat, Nov 21, 2009 at 04:58:27PM -0500, Jeffrey Lyon wrote:
> So it works as a standalone password vault also?
I don't know. My only experience with it has been as an OpenID
endpoint/provider/whatever, and it was on that basis that I replied
originally.
- Matt
So it works as a standalone password vault also?
Jeff
On Sat, Nov 21, 2009 at 4:55 PM, Matthew Palmer wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 21, 2009 at 04:06:48PM -0500, Jeffrey Lyon wrote:
>> I was pretty excited about this post until I found out that myvidoop
>> only works on older version of FF.
>
> I can onl
On Sat, Nov 21, 2009 at 04:06:48PM -0500, Jeffrey Lyon wrote:
> I was pretty excited about this post until I found out that myvidoop
> only works on older version of FF.
I can only find something about the plugin not working on FF 3.5, but I
don't use the plugin since I only use it as an OpenID en
I was pretty excited about this post until I found out that myvidoop
only works on older version of FF.
Jeff
On Sat, Nov 21, 2009 at 12:31 PM, Matthew Palmer wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 21, 2009 at 02:38:32PM -, John Levine wrote:
>> > Are passwords still the only lowest-common-denominator?
>>
>> T
[Sightly off-topic - solution specific] Some European countries have
long figured out logistics of smartcard distribution and management in
their healthcare systems - some being at the second generation,
already.
In fact this is a subject "dear" to my heart, as I've researched and
attempted a prop
Sadly, passwords are the least common denominator. The biggest problems
with 2 factor devices (smart cards, OTPs, etc) is having to buy, configure,
and distribute them; plus get them to work with all the myriad of
applications.
Certificates that are issued to computers/web browsers suffer from
On Sat, Nov 21, 2009 at 02:38:32PM -, John Levine wrote:
> > Are passwords still the only lowest-common-denominator?
>
> There's OpenID, where a provider can use any verification process it
> wants, but all the OpenID providers I know use ordinary passwords.
myvidoop.com does OpenID auth base
John Levine wrote:
Are passwords still the only lowest-common-denominator?
There's OpenID, where a provider can use any verification process it
wants, but all the OpenID providers I know use ordinary passwords.
Yeah, and every ISP would probably use key authentication, except
there's not a
> Are passwords still the only lowest-common-denominator?
There's OpenID, where a provider can use any verification process it
wants, but all the OpenID providers I know use ordinary passwords.
R's,
John
16 matches
Mail list logo