Domain: freeswan.org
Stories and comments across the archive that link to freeswan.org.
Comments · 102
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VPN setup is easy, and you'll do it anywaySure, as a hacker it's fun to install FreeS/WAN (First do a clean recompile of your kernel....) But commercial VPN products, including the VPNs in the older free PGP versions, are usually much easier to install on Windows desktops, with standard Windows installers. The simplicity either requires you to use pre-shared passwords, or else have an administrator who _did_ do some complex work on your corporate firewall, but for most modern business you're going to do that anyway.
Of course, using 802.11 without using firewalls is seriously risky, and I'm not optimistic about whatever Son-of-WEP is called really fixing the problem well. But that's a separate issue.
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to get you started....here are a few links:
both found using google with a blod alcohol of at least 3 o/oo (it's about 8 in the morning in norway, and just typing this took at least 10 minutes).
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Re:security?
While not having strong security out of the box is by no means acceptable for any hardware (or software for that matter) it's not altogether difficult to secure a wireless network given an intermediate level of networking experience. You can even do some really cool stuff with this setup if you have some programming skills.
My 802.11b network terminates directly into a linux firewall running freeswan with the Checkpoint client I stole from an old job. I understand that the ebootis package will also work.
I also run tinydns, dhcp, a transparent web cache/proxy and a webserver on the firewall.
Everyone is allowed access to the ipsec interface. People who are not authorized against the firewall who try to browse the net are directed to a page that asks for a password, which I freely give out to friends and neighbors. A cookie gets dropped on their browser to verify that they're authenticated for web browsing.
Anyone that remains unathenticated for more than 5 minutes gets their DHCP lease nuked, and they're blocked at the firewall.
It may sound overly complex, but the original basic system took about a weekend to get setup. The spiffy web authentication system took another couple of days fiddling around in the evenings.
The latest version of this system uses a fanless mini-itx motherboard and a 64M flash disk running the FW off of ramdisk. I used PeeWee Linux to get the basic system set up. I've taken my Linksys wireless unit apart, and crammed it into the same box as the Firewall, and with a little creative use of Big Red Buttons (tm) in the event of a FW compromise, I can reboot the entire thing and I'm back up and running with the clean ramdisk image. No fuss, no muss.
Client security on the XP and linux laptops floating around on the wireless network is left as an exercise to the user. (A mostly futile one in the case of XP)
Of course this obviously isn't a solution for everyone. My network consists of a whopping three internal machines (between the internet and the wireless firewalls), 2 firewalls (one internet facing, the other wireless facing) and 3 laptops. Certainly not a complex network by any stretch of the imagination. However there's not a chance in hell that my father would be able to pull something like this off. But, with a little creativity and a few skills, it's not too difficult to achieve a fair level of security. -
LEAF!
I use LEAF, and have since they forked their code from the original "Cop Killer" Dave at linuxrouter.org. The Bering floppy and CD images are the best, with tools like GRSecurity (enhanced kernel security), Shorewall (great tool for configuring ipchains, for every possible setup), FreeS/WAN (IPSEC/VPN tools), and a 2.4 based kernel that works great on a 486. The best thing is the developers over at LEAF, keep their packages current.
At present, I have 6 offices, hanging off this setup, with each one running the VPN daemon as well. There are plans in place (installation stage) to get 6 more internet circuits for the rest of our offices, making making for a total of 12 offices running off this code. It's excellent code, with a very well integrated setup, using standard tools, and gobs of documentation.
The best thing; except for the main office (which uses a P166), everyone else will be running their firewall and VPNs on pentium 100's or 120's, with 24 or 32 megs of ram. -
Panama assists security developers everywhere.
People have been saying for years we need transparent encryption of internet connections (OK mabee I've been saying it) Once 'important' countries like Panama start playing routing games like this it becomes even more important.
Such heavy handed actions might be just what projects like FreeSwan need to get more universal acceptance. That all being said does anyone honestly belive that panama will be able to block *all* UDP traffic, while they are at it is might be a good idea to block ICMP and TCP - both of which could potentially carry voice data as well.
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Re:Excellent - no more FreeSWAN patches
>With the atitude that the frees/wan project maintains, we will never see freeswan merged with mainstream kernel... hell... they still refuse to take patches from us citiziens and residents (that includes linus)
Not to mention they refuse to include support for the faster (but less secure) type of IPSec, thereby causing me to run Win2k on my router for a short while. I believe they even say it's fully valid to use IPSec in this manner (in fact it's part of the spec, so without it they shouldn't be calling it IPSec, IMHO), but they just don't want to support it in the faq, 100% due to attitude.
Developers may have a right to any attitude they desire, but they should understand their software is just going to be replaced (in the mainstream) by software from someone with less attitude. Let's hope that's what happens with freeswan. I think we don't need another OSS-style crippled set of kernel software. (Did they move to ALSA yet? I hope so!)
Just my 2 cents. -
Aggressive Mode is "Optional", not "Required".According to the FreeS/WAN documentation, Aggressive Mode is not required for an IPSEC implementation, as long as you support Main Mode. Fix those hardware boxes, I'd say. If they don't support Main Mode, are they still IPSEC compliant?
The only reason I can think of why you want this, is when you have a dynamic IP address and you want to use a Preshared key. Get a fixed IP or start using X.509 certs.
Aggressive Mode exposes some information, plus it might make DDoS easier to do.
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FreeS/WAN and Linux
When the hell is FreeS/WAN going to be merged into Linux?
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Lawsuit, Linux VPN (details)
phion Information Technologies will not provide an exploit for this issue.
In reference to remarks about lawsuits. This is a smart move, this would probably help against the getting-our-asses-sued-by-MS possibilities.
If they poke their own machines I don't think it quite counts the same as hacking somebody else's machine and then telling them they're vulnerable.
I was just recently looking at the possibilities of setting up a linux VPN, instead of opening up my Windows machines (/. never posted it, boohoo for me). This looks like a good reason to do it that way, anyone have suggestions? I've looked at freeS/WAN, but the online documentation is dead
I'm downloading the freeSwan files before their server gets slashdotted now too - phorm -
Re:Okay, this is a no-brainer, but...
Encrypt your traffic!
Yes, indeed. The best way to do this right now is to support the FreeS/WAN project. Install and test. Enable opportunistic encryption and make sure it works. -
We have our own!
Some of the people from the FreeS/WAN team have been working on WaveSec. Wavesec uses IPSec, a well known and trusted standard, to secure the radio waves.
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Opportunistic encryption
Regarding the "Feds wanna take a look" question and answer, I wonder if they have thought of installing a gateway running FreeS/WAN to do opportunistic encryption to other sites that use FreeS/WAN. I realize that there probably are not many networks with this capability, but as more people add them, the incentive other people have to install this. That and it'll help make it harder to sniff your traffic.
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Opportunistic encryption
Regarding the "Feds wanna take a look" question and answer, I wonder if they have thought of installing a gateway running FreeS/WAN to do opportunistic encryption to other sites that use FreeS/WAN. I realize that there probably are not many networks with this capability, but as more people add them, the incentive other people have to install this. That and it'll help make it harder to sniff your traffic.
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Re:Does it have any reliable update techniques?
But you have to register to use it!!
When apt-get or urpmi for RedHat, both you don't have to register to use them?
http://www.freeswan.org -
FreeS/WAN
Why aren't be putting our collective weight behind FreeS/WAN?
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Re:The correct way to do it is..Linux: the hype is over
According to the latest Gartner group research report, the Linux hype is finally over. Research shows that market share of Linux-driven production servers on the internet has finally declined to a single-digit number. The reasons for this are clear:
* Linux is unstable
* Linux has an unreliable filesystem
* Everybody uses Windows or BSD, nowadays
Research has clearly pointed out, that although there are still hordes of penguin-dressed geeks running around MIS departments, management has grown wise (or gone out of business) and doesn't even allow Linux workstations anymore, since the costs in maintaining these machines turned out to be astronomically high. The reasons for this are clear as well.
* Installation is a pain in the ass
- it usually takes a whole support team to install a geeks' workstation
* Bandwidth
- Installation and maintenance requires 4-5 times the bandwidth a 'normal' OS would require
* Integration and connectivity
- Linux was deliberately made completely incompatible and inoperatible with turnkey solutions like MS Exchange or MS SQL server. Investments in these products are therefore voided the minute you start rolling out Linux.
* Complexity
- Applications developed in Perl or C, the languages of the linux community have proven to be slow,
- unreliable, insecure and headaching complicated. Once developed and debugged, nobody is able to understand the code.
Therefore, it has been statistically proven that most companies have already moved away from Linux. This can be concluded from the following signs:
- All the 'geeks' wearing tux t-shirts are actually MIS support guys who are still studying for their MCSE exam.
- 'The screaming fast Linux machines at work' are actually refurbished workstations at a separated network segment, not allowed on the production network since every Linux (l)user seems to need nmap [insecure.org] to perform normal work-related computer operations.
- All the 'cool' Apache web servers are actually IIS machines with forged host headers. (yes, you can do that in IIS without recompiling anything. Heck, I lived for years without a C compiler and still do. )
- For the rare instance where a free UNIX is actually used in a production environment, management has smartened up and BSD is usually installed.
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Re:The correct way to do it is..Linux: the hype is over
According to the latest Gartner group research report, the Linux hype is finally over. Research shows that market share of Linux-driven production servers on the internet has finally declined to a single-digit number. The reasons for this are clear:
* Linux is unstable
* Linux has an unreliable filesystem
* Everybody uses Windows or BSD, nowadays
Research has clearly pointed out, that although there are still hordes of penguin-dressed geeks running around MIS departments, management has grown wise (or gone out of business) and doesn't even allow Linux workstations anymore, since the costs in maintaining these machines turned out to be astronomically high. The reasons for this are clear as well.
* Installation is a pain in the ass
- it usually takes a whole support team to install a geeks' workstation
* Bandwidth
- Installation and maintenance requires 4-5 times the bandwidth a 'normal' OS would require
* Integration and connectivity
- Linux was deliberately made completely incompatible and inoperatible with turnkey solutions like MS Exchange or MS SQL server. Investments in these products are therefore voided the minute you start rolling out Linux.
* Complexity
- Applications developed in Perl or C, the languages of the linux community have proven to be slow,
- unreliable, insecure and headaching complicated. Once developed and debugged, nobody is able to understand the code.
Therefore, it has been statistically proven that most companies have already moved away from Linux. This can be concluded from the following signs:
- All the 'geeks' wearing tux t-shirts are actually MIS support guys who are still studying for their MCSE exam.
- 'The screaming fast Linux machines at work' are actually refurbished workstations at a separated network segment, not allowed on the production network since every Linux (l)user seems to need nmap [insecure.org] to perform normal work-related computer operations.
- All the 'cool' Apache web servers are actually IIS machines with forged host headers. (yes, you can do that in IIS without recompiling anything. Heck, I lived for years without a C compiler and still do. )
- For the rare instance where a free UNIX is actually used in a production environment, management has smartened up and BSD is usually installed.
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IPSec
With IPSec it is possible to encrypt all your traffic. When the IPSec encryption header is used, everthing behind the IP header is encrypted, even the TCP header. So, somebody listening to your connection can't even figure out which port you are using!
On the Freeswan homepage you can get a lot of information. -
Re:Does GnuPG has VPN support?
I don't see why it should. Gnu Privacy Guard is a program that talks OpenPGP (RFC 2440). A OpenSource/Free VPN solution is for example FreeS/Wan. Those are different things ad selling them under one brand, while business-wise feasible, is like mixing aplles and oranges.
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Re:What's wrong with PPTP?
With Win2k you can get this little patch and then you have a free as in beer IPSec implementation provided by Microsoft under Win2k. It even supports x509 certs. IPSec clients are not that expensive. Look at SSH Sentinal for another option. It even supports the newer AES ciphers (which I don't expect out of Microsoft for a long time)as added security.
For all of this you have to patch the code to use the newer ciphers. You can get that here and if you need to use x509 certs you can get that stuff here. This is all pretty easy if you have you druthers about compiling new kernels and working with OpenSSL.
Why this isn't in the kernel to begin with is anybody's guess. I would guess that it has something to do with all those pesky crypto export laws. Just like everything else in the ol US of A we have to sacrifice our freedoms so that we can be safe from the KGB and that one guy from Hackers. -
First Widener!!!
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.lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't 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.wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't .have .enough .charaters .per .line .that .really .sucks .when .that .happens .and .you .have .to .put .some .lame .lameness .filter .defeater .text .in .there .i .wonder .how .many .people .will .read .this .whole .comment .I .certainly .hope .it .doesnt .annoy .too .many .people .This .is .just .the .beginning .because .PAGE .WIDENING .IS .BACK .I .like .wide .pages .I .wish .all .pages .could .be .as .wide .as .this .dont .you .wide .pages .are .much .cooler .than .those .narrow .pages .you .are .used .to .reading .because .you .dont .have .to .worry .about .the .lameness .filter .telling .you .that .you .don't-- Share twitter facebook linkedin
- Marco- 10th post (Score:-1, Offtopic) by Anonymous Coward writes: on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:35AM (#3077644) I claim this early post for JinWicked! Share twitter facebook linkedin
- Is it as good as New Riders' MySQL book? (Score:0) by Anonymous Coward writes: on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:36AM (#3077649) New Riders' MySQL book is mighty fine; if this is half as good it'll be worth reading Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Re:Is it as good as New Riders' MySQL book?
(Score:0)
by SweetAndSourJesus ( 555410 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<JesusAndTheRobot.yahoo@com>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:44AM (#3077697)
Agreed, that was a surprisingly good book. Their php book (can't recall the title) sucked, though. They spent too much time on programming style and whatnot; things that really weren't php-specific. That's all fine and dandy, I guess, but when I buy a book about php, I'd like it to be about php.
--
--
the strongest word is still the word "free" Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
Re:Is it as good as New Riders' MySQL book?
(Score:0, Redundant)
by PoiBoy ( 525770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<brian@poiholdi n g s . com>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:04AM (#3077810)
Homepage
I haven't read the New Riders' book on VPN's yet, but I have found this publisher's other books (including the one on MySQL) to be extremely well written and accessible and useable by both newbies and experienced users.
--
Sig (appended to the end of comments you post, 120 chars) Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
Re:Is it as good as New Riders' MySQL book?
(Score:2)
by einhverfr ( 238914 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<.moc.liamg. .ta. .srevart.sirhc.>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:29AM (#3077971)
Homepage
Journal
Not to mention their GTK/Gnome Development book.
I have as much respect for New Riders as I do for O'Reilly. --
LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
- ep (Score:-1) by bitchslapboy ( 193543 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:37AM (#3077652) Homepage This early post for Ida! --
Slashdot - contra bonos mores Share twitter facebook linkedin- first dead penis bird (Score:-1) by neal n bob ( 531011 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:38AM (#3077655) Homepage Journal man this site really, really sucks. Hardly makes it worth mentioning that you can kiss my grits. Share twitter facebook linkedin
-
Re:first dead penis bird
(Score:-1)
by Dead Penis Bird ( 524912 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:43AM (#3077687)
Homepage
You said it! Even the FP's have gotten boring. Methinks we need to spice it up a bit.
--
If I weren't nailed to the penis, I'd be pushing up the daisies!
Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
- What's complicated about FreeSWAN? (Score:4, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward writes: on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:39AM (#3077660) They have excellent documentation and they keep the documentation trees for older versions online. Installation is as complicated as running a skript and installing the recompiled kernel, if even that. I guess it never hurts to have more documentation, but saying that IPSec is "a difficult beast to ride" produces more awe than necessary. Share twitter facebook linkedin
- Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN? (Score:-1, Offtopic) by Anonymous Coward writes: on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:45AM (#3077703) Overrated, maybe. But redundant? Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:5, Insightful)
by Starship Trooper ( 523907 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:49AM (#3077724)
Homepage
Journal
What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
Well, a LOT. Not if you're deeply involved technically in the project, but if you back out and take the perspective of someone who's never used a VPN, plenty.
A lot of people don't even think about the fact that there's a separate protocol field in IP, or that people run any IP protocol but UDP or TCP. Getting 50/51 through your existing firmware firewall can be a real trick. FreeSWAN requires you to be able have the GNU Multi-Precision library installed for the crypto calculations before you compile it. Unless your distro can with FreeSWAN, you have to recompile your kernel with modifications.
And, like many tools, there's no single graphical GUI; unlike SAMBA's excellent SWAT, there's nothing to lead you to ipsec.conf or ipsec.secrets. There's a LOT of reading to be done.
Ok, so, for you or me, it's easy. Maybe a day of reading tops. But compare that to the commercial world where an application must install and be configured from a GUI in a few hours, and FreeSWAN is... nearly a toy. It's unusable in a business environment. As soon as you say "compile", a CTO is going to turn down your volume.
It's cool, but don't call it uncomplicated. That's part of it's coolness (-;
--
Loneliness is a power that we possess to give or take away forever Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:3, Insightful)
by smcavoy ( 114157 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:30AM (#3077979)
I use Freeswan in a production environment. I have Embedded Linux routers using freeswan connecting to Linux boxes. They VPNs are relatively simple, 2 outgoing connections to central
systems. I did find there was a large learning curve at the beginning, but now it takes 5 min to setup a new vpn tunnel. The systems have been extremely reliable. I've never had a problem (other than net congestion) with keeping the tunnels up. A lot of the tunnels have 80+ days of uptime. As for compiling, most modern distros include IPSec (trustix, mandrake, etc.) or there are options like Astaro. Having a CTO "turn down your volume" based on the fact that you have to compile software, doesn't say anything about the quality or reliability of the software, that's a personal decision by CTO not to use OSS. I do agree it's not point and click, and that would be nice, but to say it's unusable in a business environment is just untrue. It's not pretty but it works, and works well. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward writes:
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:54AM (#3078169)
How right you are. As a system admin that has always used windows or dos. I am tring to change. I want to start using some Linux servers here, but one of the things that I want to use is free/swan. It does seem great, but as a 1 person IT department I have not found the time that I need to read and understand the documentation on swan. Do I want a GUI Heck yes. Do I still want access to the
.conf file Heck yes. These problems are around a lot in the Linux community. The people that have always used linux do see it as hard and some dont want us new people to whine because it is not "dumb down", but on the other hand they want all of us to switch to it. I dont want to do away with the command line at all. I love it for a lot of what I do, but when I want to make changes or try out some new tools I dont want to have to spend 1-2 days reading ALL the docs just to know where to start. Just my 2 cents.
Let the flames begin!!!! Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:3, Insightful)
by disappear ( 21915 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:03AM (#3078246)
Homepage
one of the things that I want to use is free/swan. It does seem great, but as a 1 person IT department I have not found the time that I need to read and understand the documentation on swan. Do I want a GUI Heck yes.
With security software in general, and VPN software in particular, that's a very, very dangerous attitude: a GUI may fool you into thinking that you understand what's going on when in reality you haven't a clue. With most software, that's not an issue, but with security software, that can compromise the very goal you're trying to achieve.
I dont want to do away with the command line at all. I love it for a lot of what I do, but when I want to make changes or try out some new tools I dont want to have to spend 1-2 days reading ALL the docs just to know where to start.
How many days do you want to spend cleaning up after a security incident that occurred because the GUI let you get away without spending two days reading documentation? How much time will you save in the long run if every time you save two days reading documentation you spend three days cleaning up?
(We lose money on every item --- but we make it up in volume!)
Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:1)
by BeNude ( 28969 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @11:15AM (#3081147)
Homepage
I would disagree with you about the usefulness of a GUI to implement VPN's or firewalls.
First of all, a GUI interface, if it is well-designed, can provide every bit as much control over the underlying security behavior of a firewall as any command-line interface. Furthermore, a GUI allows an administrator to spend less time trying to deal with syntax, etc., and more time on building a ruleset that is secure.
Someone who has done the reading and understands how firewalls and VPN's work will appreciate a GUI because of this.
For those who don't fully understand how firewalls and VPN's work, a GUI at least provides a reasonable learning environment and early attempts at a ruleset will probably more secure anyhow. :)
Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:3, Insightful)
by disappear ( 21915 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @12:30PM (#3081528)
Homepage
I would disagree with you about the usefulness of a GUI to implement VPN's or firewalls.
I never said a GUI wasn't useful to implement VPNs. Just that it was dangerous to implement them without reading the documentation, a problem that a GUI makes worse only because it tricks people into thinking they can get away without it.
Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:3, Insightful)
by disappear ( 21915 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @12:30PM (#3081528)
Homepage
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Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:1)
by BeNude ( 28969 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @11:15AM (#3081147)
Homepage
I would disagree with you about the usefulness of a GUI to implement VPN's or firewalls.
-
IANACLB
(Score:4, Interesting)
by hey! ( 33014 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:21AM (#3078804)
Homepage
Journal
IANACLB (I Am Not a Command Line Bigot), but doing better than a CLI interface in an area like this is a tall order. It's not something you can just slap onto the product in a few days (as most VPN box configuration GUIs I've seen appear to be).
The problem with the GUI interfaces I have seen is that they really don't give you any effective conceptual support. You have to figure out the topology and requirements of your network, then you do this bit of intellectual gymnastics that turns these global requirements and properties into settings for each individual box, THEN you sit down at your GUI. At that stage, the GUI can have very little benefit, since you are talking about a half dozen relatively simple commands you need to type in. In fact, typing them in means you can keep them in a little word processor file and send them to the box over and over again with little changes -- good for setting up multiple boxes or for playing around with a single box you are repeatedly pin-resetting.
To really help a person like you who doesn't have time to bone up on every box you are working with, what you really need is something that is kind of a cross between a network management system and a CAD system. You would sketch out your network, and drop little dollops of distinctively colored "paint" on each network or host that needs to participate in some virtual network. The system would then output configurations to download to each of the participating firewalls or hosts.
A GUI that just configures and individual box does practically nothing for you.
--
Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
-
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:3, Insightful)
by disappear ( 21915 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:03AM (#3078246)
Homepage
-
Where to get Freeswan packages for Red Hat
(Score:2)
by Nailer ( 69468 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @10:47AM (#3080965)
Unless your distro can with FreeSWAN, you have to recompile your kernel with modifications.
Non-US distributions like SuSE and Debian can include Freeswan in their list of apps. US based ones like Red Hat can't. But some lovely fellows at Steambaloon (a Linux security consulting firm - no, I work for someone else) produce source and binary packages of the original and updated Red Hat kernels (with the AC patches, extensive testing, and old 2.4 VM) with Klips, the kernel level part of ipsec, compiled in.
Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
How stupid is the CTO?
(Score:1)
by SharpNose ( 132636 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @11:21AM (#3081178)
Journal
Let's see: provided I know FreeSWAN, I can grab a machine and start setting it up immediately. If I want to get something commercial and very expensive, I have to fill out how many forms, get approval from how many people, wait for it to get ordered how long? Exactly where are you starting your clock when you say "configured from GUI in a few hours?"
Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
-
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:3, Insightful)
by smcavoy ( 114157 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:30AM (#3077979)
I use Freeswan in a production environment. I have Embedded Linux routers using freeswan connecting to Linux boxes. They VPNs are relatively simple, 2 outgoing connections to central
-
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:3, Interesting)
by LWolenczak ( 10527 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<julia@evilcow.org>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:25AM (#3077934)
Homepage
Journal
The FreeS/WAN people don't document everything that you can do with frees/wan. Its very neat when you get down to the point where your playing with dozens of tunnels confiugred every which way.
One of the things that they don't tell you how to do, i guess so they don't get asked questions, is how to put gre traffic inside of an ipsec tunnel and make it work right. Also, it seems to have slipped by that you CAN make two linux 2.4 secure gateways talk to each other over the ipsec tunnel.
I have a couple samples of some of the neat things I have done at http://lwolenczak.net/ipsec.html Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:3, Interesting)
by Etyenne ( 4915 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:40AM (#3078498)
Complicated thing with FreeSWAN
:
- Client behind NAT
- Left/Right side nomenclature really confuse me; they could have used "peers" or client/server, I don't know
- Recompiling kernel; easy if you have a single box, quite hard when you manage 30+. Plus it require you to commit the sin of rebooting the machine.
At work, we have choosen CIPE for Linux-Linux VPN. It is totally userland, come stock on recent RedHat version and is available as RPM; all that make it is easy to install and upgrade on a lot of machines. Plus the config file is really dumb-proof. We are stuck using PPTP for Windows-Linux VPN because that's all the Windows monkeys know about. --
:wq Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:1)
by pivo ( 11957 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:17AM (#3078772)
From my understanding of FreeSWAN, it's not intended to connect many machines to a central point, for example a VPN for home manchines connected to a central office. It's intended to link offices together. So you should only have to install it on the specific machines that link those offices. If you're company's so big or disperse that you have thirty officies, then I guess you would have to recompile each kernel, though you'd be smarter to have identical machines and build the kernel once then distribute it to each machine.
We use PPP over SSH for our home/office VPN for Linux and Solaris. It works very well and since it was originally a skunworks project, we didn't even have to get IT to open any new ports since SSH was already supported. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:1)
by pivo ( 11957 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:17AM (#3078772)
From my understanding of FreeSWAN, it's not intended to connect many machines to a central point, for example a VPN for home manchines connected to a central office. It's intended to link offices together. So you should only have to install it on the specific machines that link those offices. If you're company's so big or disperse that you have thirty officies, then I guess you would have to recompile each kernel, though you'd be smarter to have identical machines and build the kernel once then distribute it to each machine.
-
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:2)
by LinuxGeek8 ( 184023 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:57AM (#3079084)
Homepage
I am struggling for some time now to get it going, but I still do not understand how it works.
On my end I have a linux firewall with iptables.
And what I could not figure out is what to do with the packet filtering, do I need to accept traffic over 50/ip on the ipsec0 interface or the eth0 interface. Same question for the 500 udp/ip traffic.
And the other part of the network is connected to a freebsd server with racoon running. That is a completely different ipsec implementation. At least for configuring it is different.
I believe running a packet filter is quite hard if you want to do it right. You have to understand networking and just play with for a few weeks just to understand it.
If anyone would tell me he has a secure packet filter running, but cannot explain how it works, I just cannot believe it. You just have to know what you are doing.
Same with ipsec.
Ipsec is not only networking, but also crypto.
So there is more you need to know about it, and it adds extra complexity to firewalling. --
Well, don't worry about that. We can get you back before you leave. (Dr. Who)
Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:1)
by pfunkmallone ( 89539 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Thursday February 28, 2002 @09:44AM (#3086925)
On your eth0 interface of the firewall, you need to allow 500 udp, and 50 tcp (if you're using ESP which is default). This allows the IPSEC peers to setup the tunnel. http://www.freeswan.org/freeswan_trees/freeswan-1
. 95/doc/firewall.html
According to the FreeSwan folks, no firewalling NEEDS to be done on the ipsec0 interfaces, as all packets coming through this tunnel are already being disassembled and "cleaned-up" by freeswan itself. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Re:What's complicated about FreeSWAN?
(Score:1)
by pfunkmallone ( 89539 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Thursday February 28, 2002 @09:44AM (#3086925)
On your eth0 interface of the firewall, you need to allow 500 udp, and 50 tcp (if you're using ESP which is default). This allows the IPSEC peers to setup the tunnel. http://www.freeswan.org/freeswan_trees/freeswan-1
- Women of the world, Stop sucking dick! (Score:-1, Troll) by Anonymous Coward writes: on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:46AM (#3077705) Women of the world, it is time to stop sucking dick!
Sucking dick is the ultimate act of subservience;
a woman sucking dick not only gets no orgasm for
her work, but gets a mouthfull of what can only
be described as warm rancid milk for her efforts.
This sexual slavery must be stopped!
Women, reclaim your mouths, and
STOP
SUCKING
DICK! Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:Women of the world, Stop sucking dick!
(Score:-1)
by SweetAndSourJesus ( 555410 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<JesusAndTheRobot.yahoo@com>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:07AM (#3077832)
blasphemer.
I'm a guy. Can I still suck dick? I really enjoy sucking cock, as do many of my female friends.
--
--
the strongest word is still the word "free" Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin - Re:Women of the world, Stop sucking dick! (Score:-1, Offtopic) by Anonymous Coward writes: on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:07AM (#3077834) So, this means you prefer getting your dick sucked by men, right? Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
- Alan Thicke. DEAD. (Score:-1) by Alan_Thicke ( 553655 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:47AM (#3077709) Journal I just heard the sad news on CBC radio. Comedy actor/writer Alan Thicke was found dead in his home this morning. Even if you never liked his work, you can appreciate what he did for 80's television. Truly a Canadian icon.
He will be missed :(
Show me That Smile (The Growing Pains Theme Song):Show me that smile again.
--
Ooh show me that smile.
Don't waste another minute on your crying.
We're nowhere near the end.
We're nowhere near.
The best is ready to begin.
As long as we got each other
We got the world
Sitting right in our hands.
Baby rain or shine;
All the time.
We got each other
Sharing the laughter and love.
Alan Thicke's Journal
My Slashdot ads say " Share twitter facebook linkedin- why? (Score:0) by tplayford ( 308405 ) writes: Alter Relationship <tom@sai[ ]taly.com ['l-i' in gap]> on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:51AM (#3077734) I'm sure this book is very usefull etc. But I've set up serveral internationl linux based VPN's now and it really isn't that difficult.
I suppose this is the same for almost all computer books, easy if you know how...
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Re:why?
(Score:2, Insightful)
by MonkeyBot ( 545313 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:09AM (#3077844)
Sometimes, there are special constraints on the networks you are working with. For instance, I need to use stuff that uses IP, but since PPP over SSH is strictly TCP, I can't use that option. Moreover, my boss is a paranoid guy that doesn't trust some 24-year-old punk (me) to run his firewalls, so both offices have managed firewalls through different ISPs, ruling out the possibility of a single ISP routing traffic over its network to the other office so that I don't have to do anything. This adds additional constraints because since I can't control the firewall without going through pains with both ISPs for several days, I can't even open a port for something like PPTP (which I really wouldn't want to do anyway). Granted, I can probably find out what I need to know from a Google search, but it would be nice to have all the common VPN solutions covered--even just introduced--in a book format. I'm buying it.
Parent Share
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Re:why?
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @08:10AM (#3079648)
Of course, ppp over ssh implies a full IP tunnel using ppp with ssh underneath, IP in TCP encapsulation, essentially. You get full IP functionality this way, though the architecture is horribly flawed (TCP connections run with TCP somewhere underneath, very bad when packets get loss and two layers start doing recovery).
Now ssh without ppp on top supports only TCP tunnels, I'll assume that is what you are talking about. A statement that says you need to use IP, but you only get TCP sounds really goofy, since TCP rides on top of IP, phrasing it with the protocols you need (i.e. udp, icmp, etc) would have made the post more sensible (that and omitting ppp...). If I heard someone make the statement you just made I wouldn't trust them with firewall configuration either...
--
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
Re:why?
(Score:2)
by Pii ( 1955 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<jedi.lightsaber@org>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @08:31AM (#3079810)
Journal
What do you mean, "PPP over SSH is strictly TCP?"
Are you saying that ICMP, or UDP, traffic is unable to utilize this tunnel?
That is certainly not correct. Just as PPP carries all of your IP traffic (any protocol) between your home and your ISP, a PPP over SSH tunnel will also carry whatever you need it to.
--
For those that would die defending it, Freedom
has a sweet taste that the protected will never know. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Re:why?
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @08:10AM (#3079648)
Of course, ppp over ssh implies a full IP tunnel using ppp with ssh underneath, IP in TCP encapsulation, essentially. You get full IP functionality this way, though the architecture is horribly flawed (TCP connections run with TCP somewhere underneath, very bad when packets get loss and two layers start doing recovery).
-
Re:why?
(Score:2)
by Bender Unit 22 ( 216955 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @07:13AM (#3079206)
Journal
It's not when it works you need the books. It's when it doesn't work you'd wish you had the book.
I have configured a VPN with the help of a HOW-TO page and it worked. B
ut when you want to do larger setup's in the "real" world. All kinds of questions comes and demands comes to mind and it's nice to be on top of things and be able to say from the first meeting, what is possible and what is not. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
- Garsh (Score:-1) by Guns n' Roses Troll ( 207208 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @03:51AM (#3077735) Homepage I never knew that a high-steppin' yella could do that.
Share twitter facebook linkedin- VPN hardware (Score:1, Troll) by pokka ( 557695 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:02AM (#3077793) Building VPNs is a pain in the ass, regardless of whether you're using windows NT/2k or linux. Microsoft's documentation is sketchy (and in some cases completely wrong), and there are very few sources for building a VPN in Linux.
This book may make it easier to build a VPN, but it's kind of obsolete, now that the Linksys VPN router has been released, making it a matter of plugging in and turning on. Of course, if you have plenty of free time, but very little money, you might go for the book instead. Share twitter facebook linkedin- Re:VPN hardware (Score:-1, Offtopic) by Anonymous Coward writes: on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:17AM (#3077888) Heck of a troll. Good Job! Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
- Re:VPN hardware (Score:2, Interesting) by Cyno ( 85911 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:38AM (#3078046) Journal ...or if you're worried about security. I never trust commercial companies to deliver secure code. Specially if they keep it closed source. Unless you want to flash the rom on this thing every few weeks I'd just read up on a linux ppp over ssh solution and write some scripts to keep that software updated. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
- Re:VPN hardware (Score:1) by starpool ( 562363 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @02:12PM (#3081956) We started out making slow progress with FreeS/WAN trying to connect to a Raptor Firewall, and thought we'd try to take the easy way out and use two Linksys VPN Routers. Bottom line: the LVRs will only allow one Class C subnet access to the tunnel. Since we have multiple subnets at 4 different locations, the LVR is disqualified, at least for now. (Maybe Linksys will add this capability to future firmware.) So we're back to FreeS/WAN and Raptor...now if I can just get that book at my local BN. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
- What's wrong with PPTP? (Score:4, Interesting) by Jacco de Leeuw ( 4646 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:06AM (#3077826) Homepage PPTP is often used for 'road warrior' setups, i.e. people working from home or on the road. It's cheap because there are free (as in speech) PPTP servers for Linux and the Windows PPTP clients are free too (as in beer). In contrast, Windows IPSEC clients are often expensive.
So, what's wrong with it then? Well, the security of PPTP apparently depends on the password. A German student has written software which can crack the password in a couple of hours on a Pentium II.
c't (Heise) reported about this.
--
-------
Warning: Slashdot may contain traces of nuts.
Share twitter facebook linkedin- Re:What's wrong with PPTP? (Score:2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward writes: on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:19AM (#3077901) It's Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol and thus more limited than IPSec which can be used in routed mode and can connect arbitrary networks. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Re:What's wrong with PPTP?
(Score:3, Interesting)
by FallLine ( 12211 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:25AM (#3077939)
Well firstly, Microsoft's implimentation of PPTP is insecure, buggy on the client side (and the server side, where their server is used), and has a hard time supporting multiple clients in a NAT environment.
Secondly, a lot of older hardware has little to no support for the GRE protocol that PPTP depends on. Thus many people simply can't use it.
Thirdly, it's virtually impossible to get two people connecting to the same VPN behind the same NAT network on any hardware. The nature of GRE makes it very difficult since it has no concept of port to diffentiate between packets, only source and destination IP. Unfortunately, NAT is very common these days so this really does matter. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:What's wrong with PPTP?
(Score:0, Troll)
by icedivr ( 168266 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @09:44AM (#3080500)
If it's so insecure, why aren't people getting cracked all the time?
Secondly, since when does hardware support a networking protocol in the absense of software? Any machine that can run 95 or 98 can run PPTP. They have pretty modest hardware requirements by today's standards.
Thirdly, I have created multiple outbound pptp tunnels behind an ICS connection. It can be done.
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Re:What's wrong with PPTP?
(Score:0, Troll)
by icedivr ( 168266 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @09:44AM (#3080500)
If it's so insecure, why aren't people getting cracked all the time?
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Re:What's wrong with PPTP?
(Score:3, Informative)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:40AM (#3078066)
Just FYI, but Win2k and newer (at least) include native IPSEC support that can interoperate with FreeS/WAN and such. Other systems, well, they are intended for home use that doesn't need that functionality..
--
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Wrong: Win2K IPSEC uses L2TP for tunneling
(Score:1)
by Xenophon Fenderson, ( 1469 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<xenophon+slashdot@irtnog.org>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:24AM (#3078826)
Homepage
Windows 2000/XP's support for IPSEC is limited to transport mode. Tunnelling is handled by Cisco's Layer 2 Tunnelling Protocol (L2TP). Unless FreeS/WAN and KAME now support L2TP, IPSEC VPNs using Windows-native clients are limited to routable IP addresses all the way around.
Now NAT is evil---ask my friends, I rant about it all the time---but in the real world, one must be able to tunnel VPN traffic at least in one direction (into the company). Without support for L2TP in FreeS/WAN or commercial IPSEC clients in Windows, one cannot currently do this.
Please, I beg you, prove me wrong. I've been struggling to get Windows IPSEC working with KAME for some time now. And my copy of Cisco's Unity VPN client doesn't work on XP.
--
I'm proud of my Northern Tibetian Heritage Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:Wrong: Win2K IPSEC uses L2TP for tunneling
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @07:40AM (#3079371)
L2TPd for linux exists, separate from FreeS/WAN. Though commonly coupled with IPSEC, L2TP is separate. I have heard reports that FreeS/WAN+l2tpd can be used to provide the functionality you describe to have a pretty solid VPN with FreeS/WAN and Windows ends.
http://www.marko.net/l2tp/
A bit dated, but reportedly still functional...
Now as far as getting connectivity to Cisco with Windows with tunneling, I have no idea, never tried... --
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Re:Wrong: Win2K IPSEC uses L2TP for tunneling
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @07:40AM (#3079371)
L2TPd for linux exists, separate from FreeS/WAN. Though commonly coupled with IPSEC, L2TP is separate. I have heard reports that FreeS/WAN+l2tpd can be used to provide the functionality you describe to have a pretty solid VPN with FreeS/WAN and Windows ends.
-
Re:What's wrong with PPTP?
(Score:2)
by Nailer ( 69468 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @01:37PM (#3081785)
Win2k and newer (at least) include native IPSEC support that can interoperate with FreeS/WAN and such
Excellent - do you have any documentation on how to do this? Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:What's wrong with PPTP?
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:41PM (#3082448)
http://www.freeswan.org/freeswan_trees/freeswan-1
. 95/doc/interop.html
contains some links, right now the tripod exceeded bandwidth, and that is the one with Windows interop. instructions, but I have seen it and it looks pretty solid. --
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Re:What's wrong with PPTP?
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:41PM (#3082448)
http://www.freeswan.org/freeswan_trees/freeswan-1
-
Wrong: Win2K IPSEC uses L2TP for tunneling
(Score:1)
by Xenophon Fenderson, ( 1469 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<xenophon+slashdot@irtnog.org>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:24AM (#3078826)
Homepage
-
Re:What's wrong with PPTP?
(Score:2, Informative)
by jeremiahstanley ( 473105 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<miah AT miah DOT org>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:45AM (#3078100)
Homepage
With Win2k you can get this little patch and then you have a free as in beer IPSec implementation provided by Microsoft under Win2k. It even supports x509 certs. IPSec clients are not that expensive. Look at SSH Sentinal for another option. It even supports the newer AES ciphers (which I don't expect out of Microsoft for a long time)as added security.
For all of this you have to patch the code to use the newer ciphers. You can get that here and if you need to use x509 certs you can get that stuff here. This is all pretty easy if you have you druthers about compiling new kernels and working with OpenSSL.
Why this isn't in the kernel to begin with is anybody's guess. I would guess that it has something to do with all those pesky crypto export laws. Just like everything else in the ol US of A we have to sacrifice our freedoms so that we can be safe from the KGB and that one guy from Hackers. --
Hire me... Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
Its damn slow
(Score:1)
by moankey ( 142715 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:08AM (#3078275)
From testimonies of traveling whatevers the people always complain that PPTP is very sloooow. They preferred using RAS in place, albeit a very expensive phone bill.
Most were of course higher level execs so their complaining actually mattered. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
Re:What's wrong with PPTP?
(Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward writes:
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:19AM (#3078347)
So, what's wrong with it then? Well, the security of PPTP apparently depends on the password. A German student [uni-freiburg.de] has written software which can crack the password in a couple of hours on a Pentium II.
Thank god I'm not in Germany!!!! Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
Re:What's wrong with PPTP?
(Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward writes:
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:26AM (#3078396)
You can buy PGPnet (IPsec client) in most office depots , office max, or Circuit City for $39. It has the same functionality as the NAI version.
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PGPnet
(Score:3, Informative)
by Jacco de Leeuw ( 4646 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:37AM (#3078474)
Homepage
That's because NAI doesn't know what to do with it. Could they be dumping the product for $39? They want to sell off some parts currently included with PGPnet. There's some uncertainty if you buy the product. Will they update it? Will they fix bugs?
--
-------
Warning: Slashdot may contain traces of nuts.
Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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PGPnet
(Score:3, Informative)
by Jacco de Leeuw ( 4646 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:37AM (#3078474)
Homepage
That's because NAI doesn't know what to do with it. Could they be dumping the product for $39? They want to sell off some parts currently included with PGPnet. There's some uncertainty if you buy the product. Will they update it? Will they fix bugs?
--
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wireless PPTP == readable password file
(Score:1)
by nealmcb ( 125634 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Friday March 01, 2002 @04:59AM (#3091216)
Homepage
The Heise article is in German, but refers to
the original paper which is
in English
Normally, the file
-- /etc/shadow (or /etc/password on old systems) is regarded one of the most vulnerable points of an unix system [Uni99]. If an attacker can obtain the information in this file, the system is nearly hacked. Using Microsoft's PPTP protocol, information about your passwords is not only publicly available, you also provide additional hints about the passwords, which allow to speed-up the attack by a factor of up to 2^16 .With this said, it is clear why we believe Microsoft's PPTP implementation isn't suitable for securing wireless networks.
--Neal
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Go IETF!
- Problem is getting Management to go along (Score:2, Interesting) by Cy Guy ( 56083 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:27AM (#3077946) Homepage Journal I think the priority should be getting management to understand the importance of using standard protocols instead of proprietary ones.
Having a book like this one is great if you want to familiarize yourself with the standards and how to implement them on Linux, but the much harder task is getting Management, particularly at larger companies, to see the benefit of implementing a standards based VPN where the users can use any standards based client over any TCP/IP network.
Instead what I see is managers that want to buy a single product that comes with both the server and client applications, but then doesn't work or is hard to implement when the clients are trying to access the VPN from a cablemodem, DSL, or 802.11 connected machine, and don't (God forbid) want to use MSIE and Citrix on Windows to get onto the office network.
--
Work for Change & GET PAID! Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:Problem is getting Management to go along
(Score:0)
by MojoReisen ( 218327 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:00PM (#3082501)
Journal
You've got that right.
We're tasked with supporting Citrix IE-ALE Windows VPN clients with FlowPoint modems or Instant Internet boxes over DSL. Of course it is completely unrealiable.
The task is truly Herculean. They (vendors)all point their fingers at each other, and I'm waist-deep in IPSec, MTU's ,etc. and all that other black magic.
--
"Nothing is impossible for the man who refuses to listen to reason" Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
- Can't beat SSH (Score:2, Insightful) by schlach ( 228441 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:27AM (#3077953) Journal for simple encrypted forwarding
LocalForward 8080 theproxy:8080
LocalForward 25 thesmtp:25
LocalForward 143 theimap:143
Don't forget your '-g' =) Share twitter facebook linkedin-
SSH != VPN. That's a good thing.
(Score:1)
by Brian Hatch ( 523490 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<<bri> <at> <ifokr.org>>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:32AM (#3078902)
Homepage
Journal
We have a section about when a VPN is not what you need, and these are the exact kind of examples when a VPN is unnecessary overkill.
As a side note, if you use '-g', make sure you have iptables/ipchains/hosts.{allow|deny} rulesets enabled to make sure that only authorized machines can use the gateway. Otherwise anyone in the world can use your encrypted tunnel.
Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:SSH != VPN. That's a good thing.
(Score:2)
by brassrat77 ( 9533 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @09:33AM (#3080403)
As a side note, if you use '-g', make sure you have iptables/ipchains/hosts.{allow|deny} rulesets enabled to make sure that only authorized machines can use the gateway.
This is an EXCELLENT POINT that CANNOT BE OVEREMPHASIZED.
I recently had to set up tunnels to allow a set of NAT'd workstations (laptops runnin a mix of Linux and W2K) access a system on the inside of a remote firewall where SSH was the only available securable protocol. We needed to use the "-g" switch, and the need for filtering access was immediately apparent.
We ended up using a set of scripts to build the tunnel, including the necessary iptables rules.
As an aside, I'd check if hosts.allow|deny rules are sufficient - I think the ssh tunnel would make all connections appear to be coming from the host running the tunnel. (Can't check for myself right now)
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Re:SSH != VPN. That's a good thing.
(Score:2)
by brassrat77 ( 9533 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @09:33AM (#3080403)
As a side note, if you use '-g', make sure you have iptables/ipchains/hosts.{allow|deny} rulesets enabled to make sure that only authorized machines can use the gateway.
- The main problem with IPSEC... (Score:5, Insightful) by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:48AM (#3078126) IPSEC is wonderful, but many businesses don't think things through and use it for telecommuting. Why is this bad? Well, the way this works is that someone connects to the VPN system and gets a full tunnel that allows the authorized client to behave on the internal network as if it was actually there, bypassing the firewall. The problem here is pretty obvious. The client machine is not protected by a firewall,a nd so if the client is compromised, an attacker has a clear path straight past the firewall. So the effectiveness of the firewall is greatly reduced.
Now if you don't have a firewall protectecting the network, this won't hurt, but if you do, then a solution like ssh is somewhat more secure, as you only set up the tunnels you absolutely need to very specific hosts. While there is still a risk, it is greatly reduced and strikes a good balance between usability and security.
What IPSEC *is* good for is seamlessly connecting sites together without really expensive dedicated lines securely. While it makes no guarantee as to bandwidht or availability, it does provide almost the same level of security. If a company can't afford lines to sites but still wants to expand, IPSEC is ideal. I use it to connect my home private network to a friends home private network. The key here is that not only do you have to trust the clients whose keys you permit to connect, but you must also trust that the administrator of that client machine or network is sufficiently competent to keep his network secure, as the security of the two networks is tied a lot more closely together... --
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more. Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:1, Informative)
by Anonymous Coward writes:
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:58AM (#3078205)
Actually, this is bypassed by disabling split tunneling (allowing the client machine to access the internet "directly" and accessing the VPN tunnel).
-m
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Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by j7953 ( 457666 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @07:19AM (#3079240)
Actually, this is bypassed by disabling split tunneling (allowing the client machine to access the internet "directly" and accessing the VPN tunnel).
Well, but that doesn't prevent the telecommuter's computer to become compromised with some background logging software that'll collect information when connected to the company network, and send it to the attacker when connected to the internet.
Of course, using an SSH tunnel also doesn't solve that problem.
The only real option is to assign IPs from a different subnet to the telecummters' home computers, and having a firewall between that subnet and the rest of the company network that'll not allow access to certain ressources that are especially critical. And, of course, the telecommuters must be educated about the security issues.
--
Sig (appended to the end of comments I post, 54 chars) Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by j7953 ( 457666 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @07:19AM (#3079240)
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Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2, Informative)
by icedivr ( 168266 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:10AM (#3078285)
Your beef can be easily solved by ensuring that the remote machine's default route is down the tunnel.
As far as I'm concerned, a bigger threat is the road warrior laptop not having adequate virus protection. (VP of Sales does insist on Windows, doesn't he?) Desktops behind the firewall presumably have multiple layers of protection in front of them, the road warrior, maybe not. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by Jacco de Leeuw ( 4646 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:31AM (#3078432)
Homepage
... a bigger threat is the road warrior laptop not having adequate virus protection.
Agreed. Especially trojans. So, how does one secure the terminal? Boot from Read Only media? Use a thin client?
--
-------
Warning: Slashdot may contain traces of nuts.
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Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by Jacco de Leeuw ( 4646 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:31AM (#3078432)
Homepage
... a bigger threat is the road warrior laptop not having adequate virus protection.
-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by Shoten ( 260439 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:29AM (#3078417)
So, you're saying the main problem with IPSEC is that it's not a magic bullet? Nothing is...get over it. I've heard people say the same about firewalls, saying how firewalls make people think that they're totally secure, so they no longer patch systems or pay attention. That may be true sometimes, but it's still not a valid argument that firewalls are flawed. Security isn't one box or one piece of software, and saying that one has a problem because it doesn't blanket everything is like criticizing deadbolts because thieves can still break a window to get into your home.
--
For your security, this post has been encrypted with ROT-13, twice. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:53AM (#3079060)
Right, but I was saying that IPSEC is not only not a magic bullet (that is to be expected) but companies outright misuse the technology without any serious thought. They invest tons in making sure they have tight firewalls and policies that prohibit people from hooking up modems to the outside world (internet without firewall), and yet repeat the mistake in a different form time and time again. It would be nice to establish trusted connections to telecommuters, but it just simply can never be secure enough (well, maybe if the telecommuter is the same person who designed the corporate security and takes home security equally seriously, but not worth finding out).
--
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by Shoten ( 260439 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Thursday February 28, 2002 @03:15AM (#3084102)
I see your point, but at that stage of the game, it's not the technology that is to blame. Any solid technology will be a problem if it is not part of a sound, well-thought out implementation. There are ways around the problem as well, however; for example, Checkpoint VPNs can push a security policy out to the client upon connection, enforcing a firewall policy at the end point and prohibiting network communications between that point and any node besides the VPN gateway. But that's a whole other ball of wax, and returns to the issue of making wise choices when rolling out technology.
The bottom line is, VPNs make it possible to do things in business that aren't cost-effective any other way, and businesses are there to make money, not to be secure. It's a trade-off, and if the return outweighs the risk, it's worth the risk.
--
For your security, this post has been encrypted with ROT-13, twice. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by Shoten ( 260439 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Thursday February 28, 2002 @03:15AM (#3084102)
I see your point, but at that stage of the game, it's not the technology that is to blame. Any solid technology will be a problem if it is not part of a sound, well-thought out implementation. There are ways around the problem as well, however; for example, Checkpoint VPNs can push a security policy out to the client upon connection, enforcing a firewall policy at the end point and prohibiting network communications between that point and any node besides the VPN gateway. But that's a whole other ball of wax, and returns to the issue of making wise choices when rolling out technology.
-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:53AM (#3079060)
Right, but I was saying that IPSEC is not only not a magic bullet (that is to be expected) but companies outright misuse the technology without any serious thought. They invest tons in making sure they have tight firewalls and policies that prohibit people from hooking up modems to the outside world (internet without firewall), and yet repeat the mistake in a different form time and time again. It would be nice to establish trusted connections to telecommuters, but it just simply can never be secure enough (well, maybe if the telecommuter is the same person who designed the corporate security and takes home security equally seriously, but not worth finding out).
--
-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:1)
by Sloppy ( 14984 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:59AM (#3078631)
Homepage
Journal
So the effectiveness of the firewall is greatly reduced
Don't you have the same exact problem with desktop machines on the LAN, inside the firewall? Seems to me that VPN-though-a-firewall doesn't introduce any vulnerabilities that you don't already have.
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As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward writes:
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:38AM (#3078946)
But LAN machines have never been exposed to the internet. I am sure somebody can put some "fun" deamons up on a machine just waiting for a VPN connection.
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Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:1)
by Sloppy ( 14984 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @07:18AM (#3079239)
Homepage
Journal
But LAN machines have never been exposed to the internet.
Ha hah hah ha! That's a good one.
Seriously, it must be nice to work at a place where they haven't heard of "Active Content" and no one uses products like Microsoft Word or Microsoft Outlook.
-- :-)
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @07:48AM (#3079450)
When dealing with internal systems, you can enforce all kinds of policies about virus software, etc. You can keep it relatively boxed. With telecommuting, the clients not only have relaxed restrictions, but also are vulnerable while connected to the internet to the sort of attacks firewalls are meant to keep out. Normally, this wouldn't be too bad, but with a full tunnel, that machine will probably contain sensitive information itself and, for the duration of the connection, gives full access to a corporate network if compromised.
--
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward writes:
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @09:07AM (#3080140)
If you want to get legalistic about it:
Local Area Network by definition is not a Wide Area Network now is it? If you have a LAN you cannot be exposed to the internet or it is a WAN. If you run active content then you are running code on the LAN. Don't run unknown code on a LAN. If you downloading something from the internet you are using a WAN interface are you not?
The point is you have a machine that has been directly exposed to the intenet and now it is on your network and that is NOT the same thing.If I have to go to the head at a bus station I will finish my drink because I won't really know what it is when I get back. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @07:48AM (#3079450)
When dealing with internal systems, you can enforce all kinds of policies about virus software, etc. You can keep it relatively boxed. With telecommuting, the clients not only have relaxed restrictions, but also are vulnerable while connected to the internet to the sort of attacks firewalls are meant to keep out. Normally, this wouldn't be too bad, but with a full tunnel, that machine will probably contain sensitive information itself and, for the duration of the connection, gives full access to a corporate network if compromised.
--
-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:1)
by Sloppy ( 14984 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @07:18AM (#3079239)
Homepage
Journal
-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:0)
by Anonymous Coward writes:
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:38AM (#3078946)
But LAN machines have never been exposed to the internet. I am sure somebody can put some "fun" deamons up on a machine just waiting for a VPN connection.
Parent Share
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Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:1)
by -audiowhore- ( 153163 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @11:08AM (#3081115)
Bollocks! There are quite a few commercial VPN clients out there that either have a 'stateful' firewall engine (Check Points Secure Client), and some others that support personal firewall software (the Cisco client has support for Black Ice and Zone Alarms). The Cisco client can be configured to not install or initialise *unless* the personal firewall is installed/running.
--audiowhore Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:22PM (#3082392)
But then, how do you ensure the client is using approved software if you are using a standard like IPSEC? I know, corporate policy, but if people are at home, they might try more exotic things... In any event, clients configured like this are a good way to make IPSEC *better* for telecommuting, but the safest bet is to not have full network transparency, but instead only have selected services that telecommuters need and allow only those in your preferred method of access..
--
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Re:The main problem with IPSEC...
(Score:2)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @04:22PM (#3082392)
But then, how do you ensure the client is using approved software if you are using a standard like IPSEC? I know, corporate policy, but if people are at home, they might try more exotic things... In any event, clients configured like this are a good way to make IPSEC *better* for telecommuting, but the safest bet is to not have full network transparency, but instead only have selected services that telecommuters need and allow only those in your preferred method of access..
--
- CIPE - a better solution. (Score:3, Informative) by ion++ ( 134665 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:18AM (#3078339) I'm using CIPE for linux at work. It can be found at http://sites.inka.de/sites/bigred/devel/cipe.html or for windows at http://cipe-win32.sourceforge.net/.
It's a better solution because it doesnt run TCP over TCP, which can give a problem, when retransmission occurs. With the right ammount of bad luck, you can have double retransmission where both layers of TCP retransmit. CIPE runs completely over UDP to avoid this problem.
JonB Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:CIPE - a better solution.
(Score:2, Insightful)
by ion++ ( 134665 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:22AM (#3078367)
Oh yeah, i forgot to mention that it works behind a NAT, which IPSEC has trouble with.
Further more it works with non-static ip address. Obviously one end needs to know the ip of the other end, but thats all which is needed.
JonB Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:CIPE - a better solution.
(Score:1)
by The Darkness ( 33231 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:29AM (#3078878)
Homepage
Oh yeah, i forgot to mention that it works behind a NAT, which IPSEC has trouble with.
Junta already posted a valid response to this statement.Further more it works with non-static ip address. Obviously one end needs to know the ip of the other end, but thats all which is needed.
FreeS/WAN works great with non-static IP addresses.For example:
/etc/ipsec.confconn netnet
left=theirhost.dyn.dhs.org
leftid=@theirhost.dyn.dhs.org
leftsubnet=10.1.1.0/24
right=%defaultroute
rightid=@myhost.dyn.dhs.org
rightsubnet=10.1.2.0/24
leftrsasigkey=....
rightrsasigkey=....
authby=rsasig
auto=start
And in ipsec.secrets:
@myhost.dyn.dhs.org : RSA { ...
}
I have been using a similar configuration since the release of FreeS/WAN v1.5.
--
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-
Re:CIPE - a better solution.
(Score:1)
by The Darkness ( 33231 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:29AM (#3078878)
Homepage
Oh yeah, i forgot to mention that it works behind a NAT, which IPSEC has trouble with.
-
Re:CIPE - a better solution.
(Score:2, Informative)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:39AM (#3078494)
Better solution than, say, ppp over ssh (a really dumb hack), but not better than IPSEC for most all applications.
IPSEC also does not run TCP over TCP, it uses udp for isakmp, and data is transmitted through custom protocols (numbers 50 and/or 51), *not* through TCP.
Another thing about IPSEC that works better than CIPE is that IPSEC more strongly authenticates the machine at the other end. This is why NAT breaks, because unlike CIPE, IPSEC works to ensure the packet has passed unmodified since leaving a known trusted host, and the very nature of NAT prevents this. Solution is simple, move the IPSEC gateway to either the NAT system or beyond. Though it is being pushed in many circles as a good solution for telecommuting, it really was never designed for that and that usage really spits in the face of firewalls.
Finally, CIPE lacks compatibility. Sure you can configure windows and linux boxes and maybe other platforms, but just try to connect to, say a CISCO router....
CIPE is a hack that creates more problems than it solves in the long run. PPP over ssh is worse, but a dumb idea, set up tunnels for specific tcp services that you need, more overhead, but security is better (not perfect, but better). For connecting networks together, a good architect can piece together an IPSEC solution that guarantees identity at other end of the pipe... CIPE offers the gaping whole that IPSEC can while not offering enough identification. So ssh or IPSEC remains the best solution, depending on the problem. --
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin - Duh, we cover cIPe in the book. (Score:2, Informative) by Brian Hatch ( 523490 ) writes: Alter Relationship <<bri> <at> <ifokr.org>> on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:40AM (#3078953) Homepage Journal Ummm, we cover cIPe in the book. Would be a pretty crappy job if we hadn't. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
- Answer? (Score:3, Funny) by sharkey ( 16670 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:29AM (#3078412) Why does every book need to include the magic 'L' word in the title nowadays?
Because they have a better chance of getting posted to the Slashdot homepage? --
--
"Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next. Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:Answer?
(Score:1)
by Crusty Oldman ( 249835 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:37AM (#3078476)
... Or they could just say "Perl" for a slamdunk.
Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
- Crossplatform aspect? (Score:2, Interesting) by egghat ( 73643 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:51AM (#3078571) Homepage How is the crossplatform aspect covered? There are hundreds of possible solutions for VPNs out there, but if you want something that works on *nix, Windows and Mac (Classic and X) and is free and open, the range of products to choose from gets small
...
For example, I couldn't find a free IPSEC client for Windows.
Any new hints from this book?
Thanks in advance.
egghat. --
-- "As a human being I claim the right to be widely inconsistent", John Peel Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:Crossplatform aspect?
(Score:3, Informative)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @05:53AM (#3078587)
IPSEC "clients" for Windows:
PGPnet- commercial and free versions. Free version doesn't do complicated routing stuff
Windows 2000 and newer have built in IPSEC capabilities.
Both these methods can interact with CISCO, OpenBSD, and FreeS/WAN.
IPSEC is the best shot you have at a cross-platform standard. --
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
Re:Crossplatform aspect?
(Score:1)
by Brian Hatch ( 523490 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<<bri> <at> <ifokr.org>>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:28AM (#3078871)
Homepage
Journal
Most of the VPN topics we cover translate easily and directly to other Unix systems. Some small difference are OS specific. You don't enable ip forwarding with
/proc on solaris, for example, but the software configuration, routing examples, etc, are the same.
We discuss PPTP s.t. you can communicate with PPTP-only Windows clients. You can run IPSec software on more recent versions of Windows, however describing how to do so would probably increase the size of the book by several hundred pages, not counting the fact that we'd have lost some serious sanity in the process.
So when cross platform == unix-like systems, this book does it for you. When cross platform == non unix, you're on your own. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
- Semi-OT: any ISPs that route a VPN connection? (Score:1) by Sloppy ( 14984 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:06AM (#3078670) Homepage Journal
Anyone know of any ISPs (preferably outside USA) that will route stuff coming from a VPN (or any other type of encrypted tunnel) to The Internet? (i.e. from The Internet's point of view, it would be like I was a local user of that ISP, even though I'm physically somewhere else.) Doesn't have to be free beer.
--
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Re:Semi-OT: any ISPs that route a VPN connection?
(Score:2)
by disappear ( 21915 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @09:42AM (#3080488)
Homepage
Anyone know of any ISPs (preferably outside USA) that will route stuff coming from a VPN (or any other type of encrypted tunnel) to The Internet? (i.e. from The Internet's point of view, it would be like I was a local user of that ISP, even though I'm physically somewhere else.)
Why would you want to do that? Not only will it slow down your network connection, but I suspect that it should be fairly easy to do traffic analysis to determine which traffic was yours in the first place, even at a busy ISP...
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- Has anybody used isakmpd on Linux (Score:2) by Chang ( 2714 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:06AM (#3078673) Anybody out there have any success compiling and using OpenBSD's isakmpd on Linux?
I really need to use aggressive mode but the patches for freeswan are ancient/unmaintained.
A pointer would be greatly appreciated.
Share twitter facebook linkedin- ssh + ppp = vpn (Score:1) by hopeless case ( 49791 ) writes: Alter Relationship <{christopherlmarshall} {at} {gmail.com}> on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:11AM (#3078722) Here's this script I use to setup a quick and dirty VPN between my workstation at work and my home PC. It has to originate from work to get through the firewall but once setup, of course, packets can flow both ways. I call the script ssh-vpn.
You have to setup ssh correctly with rsa keys before it will work. You also have to download pty-redir. See the VPN mini how-to for more details.
#!/bin/bash
REMOTE_HOST=$1
REMOTE_IP=$2
LOCAL_IP=$3
if [ -z "$1" ] || [ -z "$2" ] || [ -z "$3" ] ; then
echo "usage ssh-vpn "
exit 1
fi
# this file holds the slave pty that the local pppd needs
tmpfile=/tmp/tmp$$
# start remote pppd
/usr/local/bin/pty-redir /usr/bin/ssh -1 -o 'Batchmode yes' -t -l root $REMOTE_HOST /usr/sbin/pppd local ${REMOTE_IP}:${LOCAL_IP} 2> $tmpfile
# give the remote pppd process a little time to send its first connect request
sleep 5
#start local pppd
/usr/sbin/pppd $(cat $tmpfile) passive
# remove file that held the slave pty file name
sleep 5
rm $tmpfile
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The pty-redir hack is dead.
(Score:1)
by Brian Hatch ( 523490 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<<bri> <at> <ifokr.org>>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:20AM (#3078799)
Homepage
Journal
No offense, but anyone still relying on pty-redir should really use a more recent version of pppd which has the '-p' option to create a pty on it's own.
The ppp over (ssh/ssl) stuff in the book is much more complete, allowing you to make more than one connection, doesn't rely on best-guess 'sleep X' timeouts, and walks you through setting up ssh securely s.t. it can only be used to create the VPN, and doesn't require logging in as root from either endpoint. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:The pty-redir hack is dead.
(Score:1)
by hopeless case ( 49791 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<{christopherlmarshall} {at} {gmail.com}>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @08:08AM (#3079628)
Thanks for the info on "-p". I didn't know about that.
You are correct, of course, about the flaws of my scheme, but you'd be amazed how well it works for my purposes. I work from home and need to get access to my work machines through the firewall.
USing my 128k DSL connection to the net, I can do a lot this way, including using VNC acceptably.
I wouldn't recommend it for any production environment, but for simple things it more than fits the bill. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
-
Re:The pty-redir hack is dead.
(Score:1)
by hopeless case ( 49791 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<{christopherlmarshall} {at} {gmail.com}>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @08:08AM (#3079628)
Thanks for the info on "-p". I didn't know about that.
-
Re:ssh + ppp = vpn
(Score:1)
by hopeless case ( 49791 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<{christopherlmarshall} {at} {gmail.com}>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @06:26AM (#3078840)
Here's a link to a tgz file of the pty-redir source and compiled utility:
http://www.hopelesscase.com/pty-redir.tgz
I had to modify it to get it to work so in the interests of saving time, I'm posting it here. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin -
Re:ssh + ppp = vpn
(Score:4, Informative)
by Junta ( 36770 ) writes: Alter Relationship
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @07:14AM (#3079217)
Of course, ppp over ssh is a bad thing, ugly and bad. For most traffic, you have this topography:
TCP over IP over ppp over ssh over TCP over IP, etc...
Note the fact that we have TCP over TCP, which is bad, very very bad. If a packet gets lost, we have two layers doing the same thing to restore a connection and things can get stalled out quickly....
ssh's built in tcp tunneling suffices for most remote access applications. For a true VPN, IPSEC is the only good way to go. Other things like CIPE certainly work better than ppp aver ssh, but still lack in certain features things that IPSEC does. Then again, if you have to build a VPN where you need to modify packets in transit (i.e. NAT), CIPE is a viable alternative if you don't mind that packets could be mangled by more than just the NAT gateways and CIPE wouldn't care, but I personally want to ensure the highest security with IPSEC... --
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin-
Re:ssh + ppp = vpn
(Score:1)
by hopeless case ( 49791 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<{christopherlmarshall} {at} {gmail.com}>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @08:10AM (#3079657)
Yes, it leads to poor performance and an unstable link. Still, for my purposes (connecting from home to my work machines through a firewall over a DSL line at 128kbps), you'd be suprised how useful it is.
IPSec would be better but I would have a lot to learn and experiment with before I could use it. The ssh+ppp solution is much easier. Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
-
Re:ssh + ppp = vpn
(Score:1)
by hopeless case ( 49791 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<{christopherlmarshall} {at} {gmail.com}>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @08:10AM (#3079657)
Yes, it leads to poor performance and an unstable link. Still, for my purposes (connecting from home to my work machines through a firewall over a DSL line at 128kbps), you'd be suprised how useful it is.
- Right in time. (Score:2) by Bender Unit 22 ( 216955 ) writes: Alter Relationship on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @07:06AM (#3079151) Journal I have just been playing with IPSec for the last couple of days and wanted to buy a book on the subject. While I managed to sucessfully make a VPN connection between 2 machine, I still need to read a great deal about what's under the hood.
So I looked at amazon also thinking that I could not go wrong with a book from O'Reilly, but after looking at the few stars it got I had been looking at this book and the one from RSA. Well, that does it. I'm getting this one. :)
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Re:Right in time.
(Score:2)
by gmhowell ( 26755 ) writes: Alter Relationship
<gmhowell@gmail.com>
on Wednesday February 27, 2002 @09:44AM (#3080503)
Homepage
Journal
Ditto. Need to work from home. What I should do is wireless (only 2 miles between home and work) but the county has something against cutting down all of those trees...
--
Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon Parent Share twitter facebook linkedin
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Henry Spencer...Ironically, Henry Spencer is also the lead programmer for the Linux IPSEC stack FreeS/WAN (encrypted and secret communication).
While also saving the Usenet archives (public and widely dispersed information)..!
-
@home and VPN software.We had @home cable access where I lived, and this was in their ToS documentation as well. This is nothing new for them... I'd bet the same would apply to software like FreeS/WAN (though if you told them you were using it they'd probably not know what it was and hence not complain overmuch). Unless they're specifically monitoring your connection with a packet analyzer, though, how would they know you're using VPN software?
Hmmm... laws passed to make monitoring of cable connections legal recently... you know, it might be possible. I wonder if they'd use the information gathered this way to enforce this particular policy. But it would tip their hand that they're monitoring you, which defeats the purpose of clandestine monitoring.
As for SSH/telnet over SSL, I think the same policy would apply if only to make sure they're not missing anything.
-
Re:interesting...
I have to admit that I haven't actually used it (yet), but I hear good things about Free S/WAN. It's an implementation of IPSEC, which is a solid, public protocol. Free S/WAN is actually the only free VPN project for any platform that I'm aware of. Generally, this stuff is commercial, and not cheap. Usually, the least expensive way to build VPNs is actually to buy routers with the capability built in (nearly all commercial-level Cisco equipment has it, for example), but that doesn't really help the wireless hosts.
There are some projects I've heard of to make PCMCIA 802.11b cards with IPSEC built into them, and, ultimately, that will be our best solution, I think. I hope someone sees a need for similarly-capable PCI and USB wireless adapters.
-
Here's a synopsis of how they do it
I like FreeS/WAN. It anticipated this problem for a long time... From "Swan: Securing the Internet against Wiretapping": "My project for 1996 was to secure 5% of the Internet traffic against passive wiretapping. It didn't happen in 1996, so I'm still working on it in 1997, 1998, and 1999! If we get 5% in 1999 or 2000, we can secure 20% the next year, against both active and passive attacks; and 80% the following year. Soon the whole Internet will be private and secure."
This effort has taken a huge step forward with the recent introduction of "opportunistic encryption" mentioned by a previoius poster. From the From the FreeS/WAN Opportunism HOWTO:
Generally, we need to add records to the reverse-map DNS entries for the client machine and the Security Gateway machine. There are special cases that are exceptions.
A Security Gateway that is going to initiate an Opportunistic negotiation needs to provide a way for the Responding SG to find a public key for the Initiator to allow authentication. This is accomplished by putting the public key in a KEY record in the reverse-map of the Initiator. Conveniently, the KEY record can be generated by the ipsec_showhostkey(8) command. All you need to
do is copy the output of the command
ipsec showhostkey
into the zone information for the reverse-map. Here is an example, with many characters of the key itself left out:
; RSA 2048 bits xy.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000
xy.example.com. IN KEY 0x4200 4 1 AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/
Each client that is to be protected by oportunistic Encryption must include a special TXT record in its reverse-map. The ipsec_showhostkey(8) command is willing to do this too. Remember: this command must be run on the Security Gateway where the ipsec.secrets file resides. In this case, you must tell the command what IP address to in the TXT record:
ipsec showhostkey --txt 10.11.12.13
might produce the output:
; RSA 2048 bits xy.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000
IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=10.11.12.13 AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/"
- the quotes matter: this is a single string, as far as DNS is concerned
- the X-IPsec-Server is a prefix that signifies that the TXT record contains Opportunism configuration information
- the (10) specifies a precedence for this record. This is similar to MX record preferences. Lower numbers have stronger preference.
- 10.11.12.13 specifies the IP address of the Security Gateway for this machine.
- AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/ is the (shortened) encoding of the RSA Public key of the Security Gateway.
This output must be added to the zone information for the reverse-map for each client machine. This gets a bit dull and repetitive.
Read the rest in the FreeS/WAN Opportunism HOWTO. -
Here's a synopsis of how they do it
I like FreeS/WAN. It anticipated this problem for a long time... From "Swan: Securing the Internet against Wiretapping": "My project for 1996 was to secure 5% of the Internet traffic against passive wiretapping. It didn't happen in 1996, so I'm still working on it in 1997, 1998, and 1999! If we get 5% in 1999 or 2000, we can secure 20% the next year, against both active and passive attacks; and 80% the following year. Soon the whole Internet will be private and secure."
This effort has taken a huge step forward with the recent introduction of "opportunistic encryption" mentioned by a previoius poster. From the From the FreeS/WAN Opportunism HOWTO:
Generally, we need to add records to the reverse-map DNS entries for the client machine and the Security Gateway machine. There are special cases that are exceptions.
A Security Gateway that is going to initiate an Opportunistic negotiation needs to provide a way for the Responding SG to find a public key for the Initiator to allow authentication. This is accomplished by putting the public key in a KEY record in the reverse-map of the Initiator. Conveniently, the KEY record can be generated by the ipsec_showhostkey(8) command. All you need to
do is copy the output of the command
ipsec showhostkey
into the zone information for the reverse-map. Here is an example, with many characters of the key itself left out:
; RSA 2048 bits xy.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000
xy.example.com. IN KEY 0x4200 4 1 AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/
Each client that is to be protected by oportunistic Encryption must include a special TXT record in its reverse-map. The ipsec_showhostkey(8) command is willing to do this too. Remember: this command must be run on the Security Gateway where the ipsec.secrets file resides. In this case, you must tell the command what IP address to in the TXT record:
ipsec showhostkey --txt 10.11.12.13
might produce the output:
; RSA 2048 bits xy.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000
IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=10.11.12.13 AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/"
- the quotes matter: this is a single string, as far as DNS is concerned
- the X-IPsec-Server is a prefix that signifies that the TXT record contains Opportunism configuration information
- the (10) specifies a precedence for this record. This is similar to MX record preferences. Lower numbers have stronger preference.
- 10.11.12.13 specifies the IP address of the Security Gateway for this machine.
- AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/ is the (shortened) encoding of the RSA Public key of the Security Gateway.
This output must be added to the zone information for the reverse-map for each client machine. This gets a bit dull and repetitive.
Read the rest in the FreeS/WAN Opportunism HOWTO. -
Here's a synopsis of how they do it
I like FreeS/WAN. It anticipated this problem for a long time... From "Swan: Securing the Internet against Wiretapping": "My project for 1996 was to secure 5% of the Internet traffic against passive wiretapping. It didn't happen in 1996, so I'm still working on it in 1997, 1998, and 1999! If we get 5% in 1999 or 2000, we can secure 20% the next year, against both active and passive attacks; and 80% the following year. Soon the whole Internet will be private and secure."
This effort has taken a huge step forward with the recent introduction of "opportunistic encryption" mentioned by a previoius poster. From the From the FreeS/WAN Opportunism HOWTO:
Generally, we need to add records to the reverse-map DNS entries for the client machine and the Security Gateway machine. There are special cases that are exceptions.
A Security Gateway that is going to initiate an Opportunistic negotiation needs to provide a way for the Responding SG to find a public key for the Initiator to allow authentication. This is accomplished by putting the public key in a KEY record in the reverse-map of the Initiator. Conveniently, the KEY record can be generated by the ipsec_showhostkey(8) command. All you need to
do is copy the output of the command
ipsec showhostkey
into the zone information for the reverse-map. Here is an example, with many characters of the key itself left out:
; RSA 2048 bits xy.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000
xy.example.com. IN KEY 0x4200 4 1 AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/
Each client that is to be protected by oportunistic Encryption must include a special TXT record in its reverse-map. The ipsec_showhostkey(8) command is willing to do this too. Remember: this command must be run on the Security Gateway where the ipsec.secrets file resides. In this case, you must tell the command what IP address to in the TXT record:
ipsec showhostkey --txt 10.11.12.13
might produce the output:
; RSA 2048 bits xy.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000
IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=10.11.12.13 AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/"
- the quotes matter: this is a single string, as far as DNS is concerned
- the X-IPsec-Server is a prefix that signifies that the TXT record contains Opportunism configuration information
- the (10) specifies a precedence for this record. This is similar to MX record preferences. Lower numbers have stronger preference.
- 10.11.12.13 specifies the IP address of the Security Gateway for this machine.
- AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/ is the (shortened) encoding of the RSA Public key of the Security Gateway.
This output must be added to the zone information for the reverse-map for each client machine. This gets a bit dull and repetitive.
Read the rest in the FreeS/WAN Opportunism HOWTO. -
Here's a synopsis of how they do it
I like FreeS/WAN. It anticipated this problem for a long time... From "Swan: Securing the Internet against Wiretapping": "My project for 1996 was to secure 5% of the Internet traffic against passive wiretapping. It didn't happen in 1996, so I'm still working on it in 1997, 1998, and 1999! If we get 5% in 1999 or 2000, we can secure 20% the next year, against both active and passive attacks; and 80% the following year. Soon the whole Internet will be private and secure."
This effort has taken a huge step forward with the recent introduction of "opportunistic encryption" mentioned by a previoius poster. From the From the FreeS/WAN Opportunism HOWTO:
Generally, we need to add records to the reverse-map DNS entries for the client machine and the Security Gateway machine. There are special cases that are exceptions.
A Security Gateway that is going to initiate an Opportunistic negotiation needs to provide a way for the Responding SG to find a public key for the Initiator to allow authentication. This is accomplished by putting the public key in a KEY record in the reverse-map of the Initiator. Conveniently, the KEY record can be generated by the ipsec_showhostkey(8) command. All you need to
do is copy the output of the command
ipsec showhostkey
into the zone information for the reverse-map. Here is an example, with many characters of the key itself left out:
; RSA 2048 bits xy.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000
xy.example.com. IN KEY 0x4200 4 1 AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/
Each client that is to be protected by oportunistic Encryption must include a special TXT record in its reverse-map. The ipsec_showhostkey(8) command is willing to do this too. Remember: this command must be run on the Security Gateway where the ipsec.secrets file resides. In this case, you must tell the command what IP address to in the TXT record:
ipsec showhostkey --txt 10.11.12.13
might produce the output:
; RSA 2048 bits xy.example.com Sat Apr 15 13:53:22 2000
IN TXT "X-IPsec-Server(10)=10.11.12.13 AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/"
- the quotes matter: this is a single string, as far as DNS is concerned
- the X-IPsec-Server is a prefix that signifies that the TXT record contains Opportunism configuration information
- the (10) specifies a precedence for this record. This is similar to MX record preferences. Lower numbers have stronger preference.
- 10.11.12.13 specifies the IP address of the Security Gateway for this machine.
- AQOF8tZ2...+buFuFn/ is the (shortened) encoding of the RSA Public key of the Security Gateway.
This output must be added to the zone information for the reverse-map for each client machine. This gets a bit dull and repetitive.
Read the rest in the FreeS/WAN Opportunism HOWTO. -
Here's why no FreeS/WAN ipsec shipped in RedHatThe FreeS/WAN ipsec project (Mailing list here) has been developed entirely outside the US to prevent US export laws from restricting its distribution. The current version of the US export laws doesn't currently restrict it, and RedHat could probably ship it if they wanted to, but the laws have changed a number of times, and they only way to prevent the US government from changing them again to reimpose the previous restrictions is to continue not to accept US code. That was the policy before the terrorist attacks, and the FBI is now trying to grab every bit of control and access they can, so continuing to refuse to accept US contributions is an unfortunately wise policy.
That doesn't mean that FreeSWAN is easy to install - until the next version (Real Soon Now, probably within the month, which is supposed to do RPMs) you start off by doing a clean compile of your kernel, installing the FreeSWAN code, and compiling your kernel again, then configuring the actual config files. But the process is independent of the RedHat organization or anybody else developing code in the US, so they'll stay free. I've heard that Mandrake 8.1 comes with it installed, but I haven't tried it yet.
On the other hand, there's also PGPnet IPSEC for Windows, and IPSEC releases like Kame for some of the BSDs. -
Here's why no FreeS/WAN ipsec shipped in RedHatThe FreeS/WAN ipsec project (Mailing list here) has been developed entirely outside the US to prevent US export laws from restricting its distribution. The current version of the US export laws doesn't currently restrict it, and RedHat could probably ship it if they wanted to, but the laws have changed a number of times, and they only way to prevent the US government from changing them again to reimpose the previous restrictions is to continue not to accept US code. That was the policy before the terrorist attacks, and the FBI is now trying to grab every bit of control and access they can, so continuing to refuse to accept US contributions is an unfortunately wise policy.
That doesn't mean that FreeSWAN is easy to install - until the next version (Real Soon Now, probably within the month, which is supposed to do RPMs) you start off by doing a clean compile of your kernel, installing the FreeSWAN code, and compiling your kernel again, then configuring the actual config files. But the process is independent of the RedHat organization or anybody else developing code in the US, so they'll stay free. I've heard that Mandrake 8.1 comes with it installed, but I haven't tried it yet.
On the other hand, there's also PGPnet IPSEC for Windows, and IPSEC releases like Kame for some of the BSDs. -
Actually
freeswan (linux-based IPsec) has experimental support for opportunistic encryption - every packet is encryped automatically when the other side of the link supports it, even if you don't know who you're talking to. This kind of thing would basically put near-end-to-end crypto on every packet out there if everyone used it.
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Re:ipsec, freeS/WAN and RedHatSo I looked at cipe of which I was unaware so far. It seems to be a light weight tool to easily set up secure ip tunneling. This might already help us indeed, and we will take a closer look. It seems to implement a proprietary protocol and does not confirm to any standard except for its own. It may be sufficient to set up a secure ip tunnel between two Linux (or Unix) computers.
On the other hand, ipsec is a well defined standard defined in several RFC documents. FreeS/Wan is an implementation of it which also allows to communicatie with other systems implementing ipsec (routers).
FreeS/WAN is developed by non-US redidents only and they don't accept even single line patches from US citisens... So at least they think that there still are legal problems - dunno. Anyway, cipe seems to be the small solution where ipsec is the right one (and FreeS/WAN then tries to implement the right one; I don't know with how much success).
AFAIK it would be great if you'd schedule a reconsideration of it for some upcoming release of RedHat Linux.
Thanks!
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Re:ipsec, freeS/WAN and RedHatSo I looked at cipe of which I was unaware so far. It seems to be a light weight tool to easily set up secure ip tunneling. This might already help us indeed, and we will take a closer look. It seems to implement a proprietary protocol and does not confirm to any standard except for its own. It may be sufficient to set up a secure ip tunnel between two Linux (or Unix) computers.
On the other hand, ipsec is a well defined standard defined in several RFC documents. FreeS/Wan is an implementation of it which also allows to communicatie with other systems implementing ipsec (routers).
FreeS/WAN is developed by non-US redidents only and they don't accept even single line patches from US citisens... So at least they think that there still are legal problems - dunno. Anyway, cipe seems to be the small solution where ipsec is the right one (and FreeS/WAN then tries to implement the right one; I don't know with how much success).
AFAIK it would be great if you'd schedule a reconsideration of it for some upcoming release of RedHat Linux.
Thanks!
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Re:Broken...Yeah, the author mentions that. I wonder if FreeS/wan might be a good solution. Just throw a coupla out-of-date machines in front of each WAP box... FreeS/wan offers the ability to plug in the encryption method du jour and doesn't require any reconfiguration of your client machines...
Food for thought...
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Re:But 802.11 Is CrackedThree points:
- It is WEP (Wired Equivalency Protocol) that has been cracked. You might not even have been using that. It just needs to be replaced with something that works...
- You can use ipsec (www.freeswan.org) as a replacement if you really need it
- Consider the likelihood of someone bothering to listen in to your home network... probably not very likely unless you are an international terrorist or some such. I would expect that your wallet with its credit card is more likely to get stolen than to have someone else with a wireless card come and listen in.
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Re:PGP (GPG)
Sounds like a job for IPSec, with opportunistic encryption.
1. Mail server agnostic
Heck, it doesn't care what you're running over it, be it email, web traffic, or telnet sessions. There are implementations available for many operating systems, too.
2. Falls back to cleartest if encryption isn't supported at the other end
If an encryption key isn't found in the DNS entry for the target host, it falls back to plaintext. Normally it won't warn you about this (since it's not widely deployed, most connections are going to go unencrypted)
3. Uses existing algorithms[...]
IPSec is an existing protocol, with several mostly-interoperable implementations available.
Note that IPSec is transport-level encryption, not session-level. It protects traffic between two hosts, but not necessarily between two users.
For more information on IPSec, and the FreeS/WAN Linux implementation, see www.freeswan.org -
Linux 2.4.5 and Freeswan 1.9 brokeLinux 2.4.5 and Freeswan 1.9 is broken. If you want to use the Freeswan patch, either:
1. go back to linux 2.4.3 (2.4.4 has serious problems)
2. wait for an official freeswan update, http://www.freeswan.org/
3. Try the bleeding-edge snapshots from freeswan.(BTW, Freeswan adds IPSec to Linux)
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I work for NAILabs on NSA sponsored projectsI work for NAILabs on projects similar to this one, though I don't currently have ties to this project in particular. NAILabs specializes in contracts like this and the projects are very interesting and fun to work on. Plus, much of the work is often released in open source venues.
Previously, we worked on a publicly available implementation of SNMPv3 (first in net-snmp and then from scratch in opensnmp, both of which are BSD copyrighted code).
My next project is targeted to large scale management of IPsec installations, the code for which should also be released to the public (though the popular FreeS/Wan code base won't accept US patches, so we'll probably be instrumenting Cerberus instead; FreeS/WAN's loss I guess, otherwise we might have implemented code for them both).
Working on projects like this is great, because it's typically in the form of "here's a hard problem", now "go solve it" without any mention of "do it this way".
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What's MISSING that's in standard Linux?
Looking at the FAQs, Midori is tuned to be runnable in a small environment like a flash rom, though it needs a development system with a couple hundred meg of storage (i.e. probably not the target system, unless you've got a target with LOTS of memfs ram or a USB disk or you're running it on a real PC.) But what's missing that would be in a normal Linux configuration? Presumably lots of development tools, but is the kernel all there, or is it rabidly stripped of any device drivers you don't explicitly configure in? Would it be easy to add something like the FreeSWAN IPSEC system (which is mostly kernel plus a few user-space daemons and utilities, and tends to also want some firewalling tools)? Is building a small linuxrouter configuration relatively easy in Midori?
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Re:2.4 security
Your best bet, if you're using NFS to link to a remote system, is to set up a VPN solution like FreeS/WAN.
-- -
IPSec via Free S/Wan
I was wondering whether RH has any plans to include IPSec (via FreeS/Wan or other) out of the box in any distribution any time soon. Now that the RSA patent is gone, and export law seems to be easier. While it isn't too bad to install, it would be nice to have out of the box support. (Although I am not sure if Freeswan works w/ 2.4 yet)
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ThoughtsWell, since writing this emulator is apparently legal in the nation where Ashran lives, I'd say that he can probably keep on doing just that. He's probably not gonna get smacked in the courts in his own country, and as long as he doesn't visit the USA (or, rather, as long as Verant/Sony and the US Gov't don't find out that he's in the USA) things will be cool. This is all assuming that Verant/Sony even has a legal leg to stand on here. But if code contributors from the US are at risk, do what many crypto projects where there are legality issues on the crypto parts do and just don't allow code from US-ians. It sucks, but them's the breaks.
But one thing just strikes me as odd here. There are plenty of examples of people making clones of clients to utilize proprietary servers and their respective protocols (think ICQ and AOL's Oscar protocol, folks), but there aren't so many people making clones of servers which proprietary clients can utilize. Is there much of a difference between the two? You're still cloning proprietary software and interfaces either way, and in the case of ICQ and Oscar at least, packet sniffing sure doesn't seem to be an illegal way to develop a client -- though I don't know if packet sniffing is all that the fellowes at HackersQuest are doing...
IANAL by far, but I am kind of curious what a good lawyer with some international law experience would have to say about all this fun stuff.
jer
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VPNs != Masquerading
I think they mean that they are not allowing you to make your home network part of another network such as your office by using things like encrypted PPP or possibly IPsec (though there are also non-VPN uses of IPsec at Linux FreeS/WAN. Buying extra IPs would have no effect on this policy.
IP masquerading is still not prohibited, meaning that you can run an Internet gateway using Linux or some other system and have an internal network use it as a gateway to the Internet. @Home only allows two extra IPs, as far as I know, and I think they would prefer to use those IPs on more customers, though I could be wrong.
Masquerading is still not prohibited! It's just VPNs, though they'll probably forbid masquerading in the future too :( (when/if they do, that's when my cable modem goes bye-bye). -
Re:FreeS/WANOK, so it's mostly developed "Across the Great Lakes" rather than strictly overseas
:-) (Early parts were from Greece, and various parts are written in Germany and a few other places, but the bulk of the effort is Canadian.)
The web site www.freeswan.org has a pointer to several web archives of the mailing list, where there are reports and discussions of compatibility issues.
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What we use here...
We use Free S/Wan set up with these wonderful docs.
We now communicate with the Linux-Firewall with PGPnet .Ok that one is not open source, but it's quite cheep at about 700 ATS (50 US$) per copy.
We also use some Linux-Laptops (old 486 and Pentium) as router. They also have freeswan on it. Hope this helps -
Beware PPTP
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Re:This was predicted some time agoPGP's real importance was that you _could_ use it, and you could get it easily, and everybody rubbed the government's face in the fact that the laws against crypto publishing directly violated the First Amendment, plus Phil had the guts to stand up to them publicly, with good lawyers backing him. This not only had excellent PR value, but got a lot of people interested in crypto. From a more practical standpoint, it was Netscape's decision to include SSL, even with wimpy crypto, that moved the public perception of crypto from "something only spies and paranoids and occasional political activists use" to "of course I use it, how else would I send my credit card number across the Internet without getting ripped off!" Even now most of the public doesn't send much encrypted email (even the cypherpunks don't send huge amounts of encrypted email), but everybody knows you can, and everybody knows you should always use encrypted form for your credit cards and other sensitive personal information, because otherwise Hakk3rZ will steal it, and that's a good start. (Sigh - if you can't get the public to use a term correctly, at least you should exploit the heck out of their misuse
:-)
The real place that cryptography has been left out has been the Voice-over-IP telephony world. The de facto standard H.323 doesn't do it, though some of the newer protocols like SIP and MGCP provide hooks or full mechanisms for it, and most of the proprietary Internet telephony programs don't appear to support it either. This means that we're building an easily wiretapped infrastructure for international calls, and starting to build one for US domestic calls as well (and at least in the UK, wiretapping ISPs is easier legally than wiretapping telephones.) On the other hand, H.323 is somewhat of a lowest-common-denominator protocol, and the newer protocols will probably be adopted because of increased functionality; until then we'll need to get IP telephony services to adopt IPSEC.
IPSEC is still only marginally ready for prime time, but capabilities and compatibility of free and commercial implementations are improving, and there's substantial business demand pulling them. The automotive industry ANX network jumpstarted it, but the cost advantages of dial internet compared to running your own modem pools are one of the big drivers, and for some industries, the ability to use the internet instead of private frame or ATM networks for corporate traffic is also a big economic win, though that's more dependent on communication patterns.
I suspect end-to-end encryption for cellphones will be a small niche market for a long time, as opposed to encrypting the airlink from the phone to the cell site. What may change it is the obvious interconnection between voice over IP and cellphones merging into internet telephony to the cellphone. Cellphones already digitize and compress voice, which is one of the hard parts, but cellphones take a telephony-centered view of mobile connectivity which will take some work to merge with the still-evolving mobile IP technology. The obvious first level of integration is gateways between the cellphone carriers and the internet voice carriers, which makes it easy to still charge by the minute for cellphones. In countries that use handiphone service (mostly Asia - it's the "you can use the phone anywhere but we don't switch cells, so you can't move very far" dumb cheap technology), it wouldn't be too hard to integrate a handiphone base station with DSL so anybody could run their own microcell and get their cut of the cellphone charges, which has viral marketing possibilities that are harder to implement in a usable-while-moving true cellular system.
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EncryptRun, don't walk, to Free S/WAN and get free IP/SEC transport level encryption for your Linux box. It can be configured to automagically negotiate strong encryption between any other IP/SEC box on the net (even using other vendor's products).
Burris
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Re:Security?
IPsec (encryption on the network layer) is mandatory for IPv6. See for example RFC 1825. Linux has an IPv4-only implementation of IPsec, see FreeSWAN.org. Hum, tracing,.. IPv6 by default builds host addresses from a prefix (kind of subnet mask) and the 48 bits ether hardware address. Since the latter are supposed to be uniq, voila, even better than intel's pentium serial numbers. But IPv6 allows many addresses per interface, so you could use the automatically generated ones only for, say, booting from the net, and use chosen or random addresses otherwise. Have a nice Day.
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privacy and freedom
I would support crypto-projects like The Harmless Little Board , a crypto device for telephone-calls (German), the FreeS/WAN project to encrypt all your TCP/IP connections or a Smartcard_for_linux project...