Put a firewall behind the VPN local interface and only allow access to the resources you want people to have access to , through VPN.
I've even had to go as far as have seperate firewall rules for certain groups of users to give more or less access.......I've used a VPN appliance that gives out different ranges of ip addresses to different groups of people and then write firewall rules based on those ip address ranges. Andy Bretten Security Manager <sec_man1234@yaho To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] o.com> cc: Subject: DMZ and VPN 02/17/2003 12:29 PM I've been following the thread on FTP servers in the DMZ with interest. I'm curious as to how it applies to a server providing VPN access using Win2k Server's Routing and Remote Access. Given that the VPN is supposed to give access to the private network to external clients (who can authenticate) how can you avoid having at least one interface on the local network? Surely the best you can do is have one interface on the private network, and the other in a DMZ (behind the firewall) - but you've still the problem if the VPN provider is compromised! How do you solve that one? TIA - SecMan.