Try deleting the line "+pap" from /etc/ppp/options . You want you use pap to
authenticate yourself to the ISP, not the other way around. The rest looks
okay (assuming "raider" is your userid for PPP purposes and you replace
"mypassword" with the correct password for PPP at your ISP).

At 01:26 AM 1/11/99 +0200, Raider wrote:
>>You've sent us too little information to get a definitive answer. My best
>>guess is that you set +pap in the line that invokes pppd, which means *your*
>>system is trying to demand that the *ISP* authenticate itself. But that's
>>only a guess.
>
>       Well... the ISP is using PAP.  That, and the DNS IP - these are the only
>pieces of information I could get from them.
[deleted]

># /etc/ppp/options file
>asyncmap 0
>crtscts
>defaultroute
>lock
>modem
># the mru value was set to maximum; than I reduced it just in case
>mru 256
>netmask 255.255.255.0
>noipdefault
>passive
>name raider
>user raider
>ipcp-accept-local
>ipcp-accept-remote
>+pap
>
>debug
>kdebug 7
>lcp-echo-failure 1000
>lcp-echo-interval 1
>
>>c. the contents of pap-secrets
>
># Secrets for authentication using PAP
># client       server  secret                  IP addresses
>raider  *       mypassword
[deleted]

------------------------------------"Never tell me the odds!"---
Ray Olszewski                                        -- Han Solo
762 Garland Drive
Palo Alto, CA  94303-3603
650.321.3561 voice     650.322.1209 fax          [EMAIL PROTECTED]        
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