LOL!
Yeah, I'd click too!
;-)
On Mon, 2003-11-03 at 18:56, The Wirefree Network wrote:
With Windows being what it is….your machine is constantly looking for shared drives/devices. If it finds one, it maps it.
So…my clients were going into their NETWORK NEIGHBORHOOD (icon) and seeing all kinds of weird stuff (ie. Quicken Backup Files, Pictures of Wife, etc). When you see a folder titled as these were, and you know they are not yours, then you will click on them.
And they ALL clicked away….
If the client does not have a firewall on that PC, then it is wide open. No different than a LAN at work or school.
Sully
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sevak Avakians
Sent: Monday, November 03, 2003 3:49 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [smartBridges] Inter Client Comms blocking?
Hi Sully,
In order for customers to map and actually use other people's drives and printers, they need to have the other computers to allow it. Were your customers allowing this or were they hacked into?
I don't get why someone would want to print to someone else's printer...although I can think of MANY funny pranks!
:-D
Sevak
On Mon, 2003-11-03 at 18:41, The Wirefree Network wrote:
I personally think it is VERY bad.
When I first opened up the network, I had interclient comm enabled (allowed). Next thing I know….I am getting complaints ALL over the place about other network users downloading files off of their hard drives.
When you allow the interclient comm., then NETBIOS traffic is seen by all. They can then map each other’s printers, shared folders, etc.
VERY BAD if you are running a business.
VERY GOOD if you are running a for fun personal network.
Sully
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sevak Avakians
Sent: Monday, November 03, 2003 3:21 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [smartBridges] Inter Client Comms blocking?
I let them do it. It hasn't had any adverse affects yet, but most of my customers don't know they can use it. Some of those who are savvy enough use it for games.
Just let them do it. If they go through the Internet and back to do the same thing, you'll still slow down the network, right? So you may as well let them do it from within so that at least it will pass by faster. If they're swapping files, less time will be spent getting the file from computer A to computer B if it's on your network. If it goes throught the Internet, it still has to go from A to B, but a longer route which will add more time to the transfer.
On Sat, 2003-11-01 at 08:45, Colin Watson wrote:
I was wondering, how many of you enable inter-client access blocking on the access points? I've got some customers on the same AP who want to talk to each other, but the client blocking is disabled, so they can't. They are moaning over this as you'd expect, but I'm not sure if I should disable it?. Just wondering how many others enabled/disabled this feature and what effect it's had?
Thanks
Colin.
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