On Wed 01 Mar 2006 (16:33 +0000), Christopher L. Morrow wrote: > > > On Wed, 1 Mar 2006, JP Velders wrote: > > > > > > Date: Tue, 28 Feb 2006 18:50:29 +0000 (GMT) > > > From: Christopher L. Morrow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > > To: [email protected] > > > Subject: Re: Quarantine your infected users spreading malware > > > > > On Tue, 28 Feb 2006, Jim Segrave wrote: > > > > > > www.quarantainenet.nl > > > > > > It puts them in a protected environment where they can get cleaned up > > > > on-line without serious risk of re-infection. They can pop their > > > > e-mail, reply via webmail, but they can't connect to anywhere except a > > > > list of update sites. > > > > > there was little in the way of 'how' in the link above though :( > > > > Well, it's very much dependant on your own network. > > >From what I know (from presentations of the folk behind Qnet, and > > talks with people actually using it) is that they have a sort of > > "export" module, which allows you to either output the IP's, or parse > > them such that you get a crafted DHCP entry, or special MAC address > > based "alternate VLAN" statement for on a switch etc. > > which is fabulous for those of you with ethernet... without ethernet most > of these solutions fall on their faces and die the horrid death of an > enterprise product :( Now, they say: "Works great on carrier networks"... > my question was "how" and "perhaps with a little less hand-waviness > please?"
You could have answered your own questions, for your own network, in the same amount of time as writing these postings to nanog, by asking the company. -- Jim Segrave [EMAIL PROTECTED]
