El s�b, 30-08-2003 a las 19:49, Frankie escribi�:
> >-----Original Message-----
> >From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Damian Gatabria
> >Sent: Saturday, 30 August 2003 7:55 PM
> >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >Subject: Re: [expert] Password Question
> >
> >
> >El s�b, 30-08-2003 a las 18:24, Jack Coates escribi�:
> >> On Sat, 2003-08-30 at 03:44, Damian Gatabria wrote:
> >> > El mi�, 20-08-2003 a las 16:55, Bryan Phinney escribi�:
> >> > > On Wednesday 20 August 2003 10:24 am, Lawson, Jim wrote:
> >> > > > Okay So I just read an article that said mandrake 9.1 can
> >reset any windoz
> >> > > > password. Can any linux distro password for root or any
> >other user be
> >> > > > reset. Say if you forgot it?
> >> > > >
> >> > > > James S. Lawson
> >> > > > Network Administrator
> >> > >
> >> > > The only way that I know of to do this is to bring the
> >computer up in Single
> >> > > User mode and reset root password from there.  You should
> >be able to do that
> >> > > by putting options in Lilo at boot to bring up Linux in
> >single user mode.
> >> > >
> >> > > If you have password protected Lilo, I am not sure that you
> >can reset the root
> >> > > password without some type of reinstall.
> >> >
> >> >
> >> > How do you password protec Lilo? :o))))))))))
> >>
> >> you put a password in /etc/lilo.conf and run /sbin/lilo.
> >>
> >> Users must then enter the password in order to boot any kernels listed
> >> by lilo. It isn't used all that much to my knowledge -- laptop users
> >> generally use the BIOS password, desktops users generally don't use boot
> >> passwords, and servers need to be able to reboot without physical help.
> >
> >Yet, i hate the fact that cracking the admin password in Win2k is
> >harder than in Linux... :o/
> >
> 
> Using linux single to reset the password is not cracking it..
> Since you can't find out what the old password was, you are just
> creating a new one.

I know, sorry for not expressing myself correctly.
The point is, in windoze, if i want to change the admin 
password, there's two ways:

1) cracking te sam file. This is a rather long process and
requires third-party software.

2) Booting with a DOS diskette, load third-party NFTS-dos
drivers, and move around a couple of files so i get a user
manager instead of a login prompt. This is a tricky process
and you risk fubaring the system.

this means that the one aspect in which windows is
 far better from a security standpoint is protecting
the admin password, since in Linux you only have to 
boot in single user mode.. it's sad, but true.

Damian


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