On Fri, May 19, 2000 at 10:05:32PM -0700, Jay Kelly wrote:
Is there a way to keep my Telnet port open but still have security?
Disable your network connection.
The general answer is no, ssh should be used instead. There is also a
telnet-ssl secure mode, though I haven't used it.
On the very
Is there a way to keep my Telnet port open but still have security?
At 10:05 PM 5/19/00 -0700, Jay Kelly [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is there a way to keep my Telnet port open but still have security?
No. At least not *good* security.
Never tell me the odds!---
Ray Olszewski-- Han Solo
Palo
Jay Kelly wrote:
Is there a way to keep my Telnet port open but still have security?
Telnet is inherently insecure because it doesn't encrypt communication
going across the wire, particularly passwords. That's why the world is
migrating to SSH.
Using TCP Wrappers you can tighten the security
On Fri, May 19, 2000 at 10:05:32PM -0700, Jay Kelly wrote:
Is there a way to keep my Telnet port open but still have security?
I just went through this. I installed ssh on my linux box removed telnet.
If you're
connecting from a windows box to your linux box, get puTTY
for windows.
fred
: Friday, May 19, 2000 11:57 PM
To: Debian User List
Subject: Re: Telnet Security
On Fri, May 19, 2000 at 10:05:32PM -0700, Jay Kelly wrote:
Is there a way to keep my Telnet port open but still have security?
I just went through this. I installed ssh on my linux box removed telnet.
If you're
On Fri, May 19, 2000 at 10:05:32PM -0700, Jay Kelly wrote:
Is there a way to keep my Telnet port open but still have security?
sure, in /etc/ssh/sshd_config change:
Port 22 to
Port 23
;-)
--
Ethan Benson
http://www.alaska.net/~erbenson/
pgpiQaynuNaSe.pgp
Description: PGP signature
To: Debian User List
Subject: Re: Telnet Security
On Fri, May 19, 2000 at 10:05:32PM -0700, Jay Kelly wrote:
Is there a way to keep my Telnet port open but still have security?
I just went through this. I installed ssh on my linux box removed telnet.
If you're
connecting from a windows box
John Bagdanoff said:
On Sat, May 20, 2000 at 12:03:04AM -0700, Jay Kelly wrote:
Someone told me about security key but I cant remeber the web page where to
download them. I guess you need to have a key installed on the remote pc
that matches the server key. Anybody know what Im talking about?
On Sat, May 20, 2000 at 04:17:23AM -0400, Brian Clark wrote:
John Bagdanoff said:
If you use the authentication type RSA in conjunction with SSH instead of
authentication type password, you'll need to exchange keys with the host
for it to be able to authenticate you.
If I understand
The previous discussion on Telnet security interested me.
I would thus like to ask:
How do you tell that ssh is running during your Telnet/Rlogin connection?
How do you set-up ssh to work?
I'm afraid I've been thinking that ssh was already working on my Linux
box, but actually it wasn't...??? :-p
Hi
How do you tell that ssh is running during your Telnet/Rlogin
connection?
Not totally sure, but whilst you're in, running ps should show a
process named sshd.
How do you set-up ssh to work?
Assuming you have debian, run:
for the client
# apt-get update; apt-get install ssh
and the daemon
At 06:14 PM 5/20/00 +0700, Umum Wijoyo wrote:
The previous discussion on Telnet security interested me.
I would thus like to ask:
How do you tell that ssh is running during your Telnet/Rlogin connection?
You don't. ssh is a different service from telnet, more or less a drop-in
replacement for rsh
At 02:31 PM 5/20/00 +0200, Sven Burgener wrote [in part]:
How do you set-up ssh to work?
Assuming you have debian, run:
for the client
# apt-get update; apt-get install ssh
and the daemon
# apt-get update; apt-get install sshd
Did you check this? According to apt-cache search ssh (running on
for the client
# apt-get update; apt-get install ssh
and the daemon
# apt-get update; apt-get install sshd
Did you check this? According to apt-cache search ssh (running on
potato),
there is no sshd package. My memory says that ssh installs both the
server (daemon) and the client of OpenSSH.
When I run apt-get install ssh (after first having run apt-get install
update), I get an error message saying that there is no available
version, but the package exists in the database. What's up with that?
# apt-get install ssh
Reading Package Lists... Done
Building Dependency Tree... Done
You need an entry in /etc/apt/sources.list for a non-US distribution site.
Remember: those nasty US crypto-as-munitions export rules haven't actually
ended yet!
At 09:44 AM 5/20/00 -0700, Miguel Wooding wrote [in part]:
When I run apt-get install ssh (after first having run apt-get install
Hi Miguel!
On Sat, 20 May 2000, Miguel Wooding SF Ten.Union wrote:
When I run apt-get install ssh (after first having run apt-get install
update), I get an error message saying that there is no available
version, but the package exists in the database. What's up with that?
my
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