Subject: Re: Blocking port 135? Date: Sat, Aug 02, 2003 at 08:09:47AM -0500 Quoting Jack Bates ([EMAIL PROTECTED]): > Depends on why you block and interfere. Intention plays a large part > according to law.
If people can sue McDonalds for hot coffee, everything is possible. I'm European, so
this does not apply, but I'd try to be very careful in .us.
>
> Many AUP/TOS aggreements have interesting no-server clauses.
Not mine. And, I generally think that with such AUPen, one gets something
one step better than Minitel or I-Mode, which is not Internet.
Yes, I'm one of those loud end-to-end guys.
> - Setup detection systems and perform immediate contact on accounts that
> trigger the system to determine if it's legitimate or not. If not, bye
> bye.
That is wiretapping in Sweden, and illegal without a court order.
I believe. Nobody has gone even close to taking it to court, and I
stay far away from it.
> Of course, this only stops outbound issues. It does nothing to prevent
> inbound, and in the event of a worm, you'd better make sure you have
> double and triple methodologies in place to stabalize your network.
Some of our thinner access lines were up to 50% full when the Slammer hit.
If there comes a much more evil worm than so, we do have OOB access
to the entire core..
--
M�ns Nilsson Systems Specialist
+46 70 681 7204 KTHNOC
MN1334-RIPE
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