Hi Marc,
> We are a software development firm that currently delivers our install ISOs
> via Sourceforge. We need to start serving them ourselves for marketing
> reasons and are therefore increasing our bandwidth and getting a 2nd ISP in
> our datacenter. Both ISPs will be delivering 100mbit/
On Thu, Dec 18, 2008 at 8:55 AM, Beat Vontobel wrote:
> Hi Marc,
>
>> I saw from previous email that Quagga was recommended as opposed to
>> OpenBGP. Any further comments on that? Also, any comments on the choice
>> of OpenBSD vs. Linux?
>>
>> I don't want to start a religious war :-) Just curi
Hi Marc,
I saw from previous email that Quagga was recommended as opposed to
OpenBGP. Any further comments on that? Also, any comments on the
choice of OpenBSD vs. Linux?
I don't want to start a religious war :-) Just curious about what
most folks are doing and what their experiences h
On Wed, Dec 17, 2008 at 9:37 AM, Marc Runkel wrote:
[snip]
> Greetings all,
>
> We are a software development firm that currently delivers our install ISOs
> via Sourceforge.
> We need to start serving them ourselves for marketing reasons and are
> therefore increasing
> our bandwidth and gettin
OpenBSD SMP support is quite limited. NetBSD SMP is quite limited. FreeBSD and
Linux
seem to be running better. :)
Adrian
On Wed, Dec 17, 2008, Marc Runkel wrote:
> Greetings all,
>
> We are a software development firm that currently delivers our install ISOs
> via Sourceforge. We need to s
Greetings all,
We are a software development firm that currently delivers our install ISOs via
Sourceforge. We need to start serving them ourselves for marketing reasons and
are therefore increasing our bandwidth and getting a 2nd ISP in our datacenter.
Both ISPs will be delivering 100mbit/se
Hello;
On May 29, 2007, at 3:48 PM, Al Iverson wrote:
On 5/29/07, Matthew Black <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
What would you do if a major US computer security firm
attempted to hack your site's servers and networks?
Would you tell the company or let their experts figure
it out?
On top of th
> 1) Locate baseball bat
> On a more serious note, I'd contact them and ask for them to stop.
> Barring that call a lawyer and have a fancy letter sent to
> someone's boss.
Seems pointless really. If you detect someone hacking your servers and
your company does not have a network security depar
On Tue, 29 May 2007, Matthew Black wrote:
What would you do if a major US computer security firm
attempted to hack your site's servers and networks?
Would you tell the company or let their experts figure
it out?
Contact your internal security and legal folks. Sometimes in large
organizations
On 5/29/07, Matthew Black <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
What would you do if a major US computer security firm
attempted to hack your site's servers and networks?
Would you tell the company or let their experts figure
it out?
On top of the other suggestions, I would add: Make sure you're really
On Tue, 2007-05-29 at 12:53 -0400, George Imburgia wrote:
> On Tue, 29 May 2007, Matthew Black wrote:
>
> > What would you do if a major US computer security firm
> > attempted to hack your site's servers and networks?
> > Would you tell the company or let their experts figure
> > it out?
>
> I'
Matthew Black wrote:
>
> What would you do if a major US computer security firm
> attempted to hack your site's servers and networks?
> Would you tell the company or let their experts figure
> it out?
>
> matthew black
> network services
> california state university, long beach
>
What happened to
On Tue, 29 May 2007 08:21:47 PDT, Matthew Black said:
> What would you do if a major US computer security firm
> attempted to hack your site's servers and networks?
> Would you tell the company or let their experts figure
> it out?
Step 0: Define "attempted to hack"?
Step 1: Ask whoever acts as
On a more serious note, I'd contact them and ask for them to stop.
Barring that call a lawyer and have a fancy letter sent to someone's
boss.
Being as they are a security company it is possible- if unlikely- that
someone typo'd an address range into a vulnerability scanner.
"Never attribute t
On May 29, 2007, at 8:21 AM, Matthew Black wrote:
What would you do if a major US computer security firm
attempted to hack your site's servers and networks?
I think the first thing to do would be to attempt to determine
whether they were trying to actually 'hack' anything, or whether they
On 5/29/07, Quinn Kuzmich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On a more serious note, I'd contact them and ask for them to stop.
Barring that call a lawyer and have a fancy letter sent to someone's
boss.
While you're pursuing that route from a legal/business side, on the
technical side I'd suggest n
> What would you do if a major US computer security firm
> attempted to hack your site's servers and networks?
> Would you tell the company or let their experts figure
> it out?
call the fuzz
On 5/29/07, Matthew Black <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
What would you do if a major US computer security firm
attempted to hack your site's servers and networks?
Would you tell the company or let their experts figure
it out?
Submit your log files to http://www.dshield.org/howto.html ?
Block thei
1) Locate baseball bat
2) Acquire plane ticket
3) Call friends in city where said company is located
4) help them locate their own bats
5) ...
6) Profit
On a more serious note, I'd contact them and ask for them to stop.
Barring that call a lawyer and have a fancy letter sent to someon
Matthew Black wrote:
What would you do if a major US computer security firm
attempted to hack your site's servers and networks?
Would you tell the company or let their experts figure
it out?
matthew black
network services
california state university, long beach
I'd contact the chiefs of the c
What would you do if a major US computer security firm
attempted to hack your site's servers and networks?
Would you tell the company or let their experts figure
it out?
matthew black
network services
california state university, long beach
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