Re:Solution: Drop Encryptions for a short time...
on
Are You Using 802.1X?
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· Score: 1
Exactly, simply treat it like users coming in over the internet, but where you also control the outgoing, you'll want to keep the script kiddies from launching attacks wirelessly via your network..
Solution: Drop Encryptions for a short time...
on
Are You Using 802.1X?
·
· Score: 1
I'd drop the encryption for a time, restrict access to web browsing...Allow e-mail but only through the universities secure https webmail server (You do have one?) and the same with any important university interfaces both staff and student based (Class registration and purchasing for example). This will allow the installed infrastructure to be used, but allow you to rollout secure technology at some point it the future...
It's really all common sense...
All the spam I get these days contains little lines of random (or apparently random atleast) alphanumeric characters at the bottom, for the most part simply capital letters, although some are more complex.
Some have random strings of alphanumeric characters longer then 50 characters...
Has anyone else noticed these lines at the bottom of spam? Surely it would be fairly easy to filter spam at the MTA level using regex on these strings...
Some years ago I saw an IMAX movie on the physics of the Universe. It included one of the most impressive video sequences I've ever seen, a zoom out from the subatomic (Yes it was of course computer generated, but still impressive), out to earth level consisting of real video, and finally out to space. Can anyone else recall seeing this IMAX film and what its name was?
It was similar to the opening scene in Contact, which would also be impressive on an IMAX screen.
If they ever get Free Cache up and running properly it will proove must usefull.
It has loaded twice for me, although my ISP has a proxy so I could be hitting a cache of the cache.
Try the FreeCache link, you can at a min. view the first page
Exactly, simply treat it like users coming in over the internet, but where you also control the outgoing, you'll want to keep the script kiddies from launching attacks wirelessly via your network..
I'd drop the encryption for a time, restrict access to web browsing...Allow e-mail but only through the universities secure https webmail server (You do have one?) and the same with any important university interfaces both staff and student based (Class registration and purchasing for example). This will allow the installed infrastructure to be used, but allow you to rollout secure technology at some point it the future... It's really all common sense...
All the spam I get these days contains little lines of random (or apparently random atleast) alphanumeric characters at the bottom, for the most part simply capital letters, although some are more complex. Some have random strings of alphanumeric characters longer then 50 characters... Has anyone else noticed these lines at the bottom of spam? Surely it would be fairly easy to filter spam at the MTA level using regex on these strings...
Where do you guys find these, or how do you generate these? I notice it's the parner=google portion, but simply adding that to the URLs doesn't work.
18kmph = 18kilo mph = 18,000 mph
http://www.imax.com/body.html?p=http://www.imax.co m/films/now_playing/cosmic.html&s=auto
Should have looked first...
Some years ago I saw an IMAX movie on the physics of the Universe. It included one of the most impressive video sequences I've ever seen, a zoom out from the subatomic (Yes it was of course computer generated, but still impressive), out to earth level consisting of real video, and finally out to space. Can anyone else recall seeing this IMAX film and what its name was?
It was similar to the opening scene in Contact, which would also be impressive on an IMAX screen.