I have Spectrum cable where the ethernet connection to the modem receives a dynamic ip address from Spectrum along with wrong name servers.
This is correct for resolv.conf: search roch.robinson-west.com nameserver 127.0.0.1 resolv.conf get's overwritten though by the modem... I'm on a Debian Linux system. I need to ignore the nameserver settings from Spectrum and the Spectrum search line. Something called resolvconf will allow me to do this??? Another thing I'm wondering about is what the proper firewall settings are to allow clients on my RFC 1918 network to use the proxy on my server. I'm also wondering about the legality of sslbump and what people who have deployed this can tell me about enabling https support in squid? Theoretically, I could have a list of https sites that are allowed and disallow all others and not have a legal problem. With google pushing web sites to go https, it's not just banks and credit unions using it anymore. Even google search is https. Uge! This is a nightmare for anyone who wants their Internet connection content filtered. Content filtering by it's very nature requires a man in the middle. The https protocol is supposed to guarantee that there isn't a man in the middle. Some countries evidently will prosecute you if you filter https connections. If I'm a business owner or a home owner running a network at home, what am I supposed to do? _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
