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Thread started 09/06/03 6:22pm

TwIsTeDmInD

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Ian, have you ever seen this?



Niiice
Sign 78 that you're obsessed with Prince: You buy a John Prine album- just out of curiosity.
TwistedSig™ rented by Conch5184
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Reply #1 posted 09/06/03 6:23pm

Handclapsfinga
snapz

lol

...now what's that supposed to be? hmm
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Reply #2 posted 09/06/03 6:25pm

DORA

TwIsTeDmInD said:



Niiice





i just want to post my arse
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Reply #3 posted 09/06/03 6:27pm

ian

I've seen scripts like it... PHP rules!
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Reply #4 posted 09/06/03 6:27pm

TwIsTeDmInD

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Indeed. That is my sig at my other board. They dont know to much coding and I got about 10 tags asking why I was posting there ISPs for everyone to see lol
Sign 78 that you're obsessed with Prince: You buy a John Prine album- just out of curiosity.
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Reply #5 posted 09/06/03 6:34pm

Muse2NOPharaoh

TwIsTeDmInD said:

Indeed. That is my sig at my other board. They dont know to much coding and I got about 10 tags asking why I was posting there ISPs for everyone to see lol




:Lol:


SCORE 10
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Reply #6 posted 09/06/03 6:36pm

TwIsTeDmInD

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I am a admin at that board, and I hadnt been there for awhile... and a brand new Mod (a rank right under Admin) who didn't know me threatened to ban me if I didnt take it off.

neutral
Sign 78 that you're obsessed with Prince: You buy a John Prine album- just out of curiosity.
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Reply #7 posted 09/06/03 6:38pm

AaronSuperior

avatar

TwIsTeDmInD said:



Niiice




that's me! shit!








lol
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Reply #8 posted 09/06/03 6:40pm

TwIsTeDmInD

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Thank you all for posting on this thread, in doing so I have put malicious viruses on your computer evillol



*whispers*

Oh thats the next version? Nevermind!
Sign 78 that you're obsessed with Prince: You buy a John Prine album- just out of curiosity.
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Reply #9 posted 09/06/03 6:49pm

iridescence

avatar

TwIsTeDmInD said:

I am a admin at that board, and I hadnt been there for awhile... and a brand new Mod (a rank right under Admin) who didn't know me threatened to ban me if I didnt take it off.

neutral



you almost got banned off your own board? you are sucha geek. biggrin

guess all that studying and beach/tropical storm time is cutting into your board responsibilites. evillol
zesty!!!
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Reply #10 posted 09/06/03 7:05pm

TwIsTeDmInD

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Dont worry... A Mr. "Sandwitch" was taken care of.

But yeah... I kind of wish he knew me. My board has grown far too large for me not to spend 24 hours a day there. Thats it! LIFE CAN WAIT! I HAVE PRIORITIES!!!
Sign 78 that you're obsessed with Prince: You buy a John Prine album- just out of curiosity.
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Reply #11 posted 09/06/03 8:58pm

iridescence

avatar

TwIsTeDmInD said:

Dont worry... A Mr. "Sandwitch" was taken care of.

But yeah... I kind of wish he knew me. My board has grown far too large for me not to spend 24 hours a day there. Thats it! LIFE CAN WAIT! I HAVE PRIORITIES!!!



hey, that was meee!!! lol
zesty!!!
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Reply #12 posted 09/06/03 9:04pm

youngsoulrebel

TwIsTeDmInD said:

Thank you all for posting on this thread, in doing so I have put malicious viruses on your computer evillol



*whispers*

Oh thats the next version? Nevermind!


i got a firewall nana

..
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Reply #13 posted 09/06/03 9:05pm

ian

youngsoulrebel said:

TwIsTeDmInD said:

Thank you all for posting on this thread, in doing so I have put malicious viruses on your computer evillol



*whispers*

Oh thats the next version? Nevermind!


i got a firewall nana

..


Tch, so what razz Most consumer firewall products deliver little more than basic packet filtering and providing feelgood factor. Easily broken, with dedication and patience!

Er, allegedly.
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Reply #14 posted 09/06/03 9:09pm

MostBeautifulG
rlNTheWorld

How do I find out my ISP just out of curiosity...Tell me Ian tell me smile
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Reply #15 posted 09/06/03 9:11pm

youngsoulrebel

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

TwIsTeDmInD said:

Thank you all for posting on this thread, in doing so I have put malicious viruses on your computer evillol



*whispers*

Oh thats the next version? Nevermind!


i got a firewall nana

..


Tch, so what razz Most consumer firewall products deliver little more than basic packet filtering and providing feelgood factor. Easily broken, with dedication and patience!

Er, allegedly.


i am sitting behind a hardware firewall, all my ports have been changed
it would take a dedicated hacker, but ofcourse it can be done.

..
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Reply #16 posted 09/06/03 9:11pm

ian

MostBeautifulGrlNTheWorld said:

How do I find out my ISP just out of curiosity...Tell me Ian tell me smile


You don't know who your internet provider is? confuse Don't they bill you each month?

Well it depends - how do you normally connect to the internet?
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Reply #17 posted 09/06/03 9:12pm

AaronSuperior

avatar

MostBeautifulGrlNTheWorld said:

How do I find out my ISP just out of curiosity...Tell me Ian tell me smile




your ISP *number*?


uh, but looking at that sign posted at the top of this thread biggrin
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Reply #18 posted 09/06/03 9:13pm

iridescence

avatar

MostBeautifulGrlNTheWorld said:

How do I find out my ISP just out of curiosity...Tell me Ian tell me smile


mbgitw, just look on your screen in the lil box the smiley is holding. biggrin

zesty!!!
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Reply #19 posted 09/06/03 9:14pm

ian

youngsoulrebel said:

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

TwIsTeDmInD said:

Thank you all for posting on this thread, in doing so I have put malicious viruses on your computer evillol



*whispers*

Oh thats the next version? Nevermind!


i got a firewall nana

..


Tch, so what razz Most consumer firewall products deliver little more than basic packet filtering and providing feelgood factor. Easily broken, with dedication and patience!

Er, allegedly.


i am sitting behind a hardware firewall, all my ports have been changed
it would take a dedicated hacker, but ofcourse it can be done.

..


Dunno what you mean about "ports being changed" but yeah you are right - for the most part, people hacking ordinary people's PCs are just script kiddies using downloaded tools - they have no patience or interest in breaking into a system with a h/w firewall like yours so I'm sure you're fine. There's really no point in going after more difficult challenges when there are millions of unprotected, unpatched virgin Windows boxes online via broadband...
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Reply #20 posted 09/06/03 9:15pm

MostBeautifulG
rlNTheWorld

ian said:

MostBeautifulGrlNTheWorld said:

How do I find out my ISP just out of curiosity...Tell me Ian tell me smile


You don't know who your internet provider is? confuse Don't they bill you each month?

Well it depends - how do you normally connect to the internet?



I have cable internet from comcast and I run aol on it...I do not get the bill...so therefore I do not pay much attention but I know it is comcast...sorry I am not a computer geek smile
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Reply #21 posted 09/06/03 9:17pm

youngsoulrebel

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

TwIsTeDmInD said:

Thank you all for posting on this thread, in doing so I have put malicious viruses on your computer evillol



*whispers*

Oh thats the next version? Nevermind!


i got a firewall nana

..


Tch, so what razz Most consumer firewall products deliver little more than basic packet filtering and providing feelgood factor. Easily broken, with dedication and patience!

Er, allegedly.


i am sitting behind a hardware firewall, all my ports have been changed
it would take a dedicated hacker, but ofcourse it can be done.

..


Dunno what you mean about "ports being changed" but yeah you are right - for the most part, people hacking ordinary people's PCs are just script kiddies using downloaded tools - they have no patience or interest in breaking into a system with a h/w firewall like yours so I'm sure you're fine. There's really no point in going after more difficult challenges when there are millions of unprotected, unpatched virgin Windows boxes online via broadband...



each port is assigned a default port number
a software firewall hides your ports
but on a hardware firewall one can actually reconfigure the port number
to be anything you want it to be.
not making it impossible to hack, but it is more secure than leaving it as the default

..
[This message was edited Sat Sep 6 23:08:08 PDT 2003 by youngsoulrebel]
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Reply #22 posted 09/06/03 9:17pm

ian

MostBeautifulGrlNTheWorld said:

ian said:

MostBeautifulGrlNTheWorld said:

How do I find out my ISP just out of curiosity...Tell me Ian tell me smile


You don't know who your internet provider is? confuse Don't they bill you each month?

Well it depends - how do you normally connect to the internet?



I have cable internet from comcast and I run aol on it...I do not get the bill...so therefore I do not pay much attention but I know it is comcast...sorry I am not a computer geek smile


Yup, your ISP is Comcast then.
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Reply #23 posted 09/06/03 9:18pm

MostBeautifulG
rlNTheWorld

ian said:

MostBeautifulGrlNTheWorld said:

ian said:

MostBeautifulGrlNTheWorld said:

How do I find out my ISP just out of curiosity...Tell me Ian tell me smile


You don't know who your internet provider is? confuse Don't they bill you each month?

Well it depends - how do you normally connect to the internet?



I have cable internet from comcast and I run aol on it...I do not get the bill...so therefore I do not pay much attention but I know it is comcast...sorry I am not a computer geek smile


Yup, your ISP is Comcast then.




Ok see all I needed was a little explination thanks smile
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Reply #24 posted 09/06/03 9:19pm

ian

youngsoulrebel said:

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

TwIsTeDmInD said:

Thank you all for posting on this thread, in doing so I have put malicious viruses on your computer evillol



*whispers*

Oh thats the next version? Nevermind!


i got a firewall nana

..


Tch, so what razz Most consumer firewall products deliver little more than basic packet filtering and providing feelgood factor. Easily broken, with dedication and patience!

Er, allegedly.


i am sitting behind a hardware firewall, all my ports have been changed
it would take a dedicated hacker, but ofcourse it can be done.

..


Dunno what you mean about "ports being changed" but yeah you are right - for the most part, people hacking ordinary people's PCs are just script kiddies using downloaded tools - they have no patience or interest in breaking into a system with a h/w firewall like yours so I'm sure you're fine. There's really no point in going after more difficult challenges when there are millions of unprotected, unpatched virgin Windows boxes online via broadband...



each port is assigned a default number by microsoft

a software firewall hides your ports

but on a hardware firewall one can actually reconfigure the port number

to be anything you want it to be.

not making it impossible to hack, but it is more secure than leaving it as the default

..


Sorry mate... I don't wish to sound patronizing but this is my profession really and I do know TCP/IP very well and I gotta say what you just said was utter nonsense smile

Okay. TCP/IP allows for running different transport protocols and different services on different ports. That's fine, that's not a security problem that's just the way TCP/IP works. Certain traffic you are always going to want to allow such as port 80 (web) and port 110 (POP3) and port 25 (SMTP).

You misunderstand what a firewall is doing, I think. Really, there is no difference between a software firewall and a hardware firewall aside from the implementation. Hardware firewalls can certainly provider better features than cheap consumer-oriented software firewalls, but a firewall is a firewall regardless of whether it is in hardware or not.
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Reply #25 posted 09/06/03 9:41pm

youngsoulrebel

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

TwIsTeDmInD said:

Thank you all for posting on this thread, in doing so I have put malicious viruses on your computer evillol



*whispers*

Oh thats the next version? Nevermind!


i got a firewall nana

..


Tch, so what razz Most consumer firewall products deliver little more than basic packet filtering and providing feelgood factor. Easily broken, with dedication and patience!

Er, allegedly.


i am sitting behind a hardware firewall, all my ports have been changed
it would take a dedicated hacker, but ofcourse it can be done.

..


Dunno what you mean about "ports being changed" but yeah you are right - for the most part, people hacking ordinary people's PCs are just script kiddies using downloaded tools - they have no patience or interest in breaking into a system with a h/w firewall like yours so I'm sure you're fine. There's really no point in going after more difficult challenges when there are millions of unprotected, unpatched virgin Windows boxes online via broadband...



each port is assigned a default number by microsoft

a software firewall hides your ports

but on a hardware firewall one can actually reconfigure the port number

to be anything you want it to be.

not making it impossible to hack, but it is more secure than leaving it as the default

..


Sorry mate... I don't wish to sound patronizing but this is my profession really and I do know TCP/IP very well and I gotta say what you just said was utter nonsense smile

Okay. TCP/IP allows for running different transport protocols and different services on different ports. That's fine, that's not a security problem that's just the way TCP/IP works. Certain traffic you are always going to want to allow such as port 80 (web) and port 110 (POP3) and port 25 (SMTP).

You misunderstand what a firewall is doing, I think. Really, there is no difference between a software firewall and a hardware firewall aside from the implementation. Hardware firewalls can certainly provider better features than cheap consumer-oriented software firewalls, but a firewall is a firewall regardless of whether it is in hardware or not.



ofcourse software firewalls and hardware firewalls work in much the same way, isolating your computer from the rest of the internet by inspecting each packet of data determining if it it should be allowed in or out.

a difference being is that with a hardware firewall one has, only one external ip adress.

and the ports number such as smtp and pop3 can be reconfigured, just as long as they are configured on the client machines as well.

for example, if a server must initiate a smtp session with a receiving server on which the smtp task is listening on port 26, set the smtp outbound port to 26 on the server document of the initiating server.

ports are how hackers break into networks/pc's reconfiguring them is just a small security measure.

in my mind, the best protection is a combination of both hardware and software firewalls, since both have different advantages and disadvantages.

..
[This message was edited Sat Sep 6 22:06:43 PDT 2003 by youngsoulrebel]
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Reply #26 posted 09/06/03 10:05pm

ian

youngsoulrebel said:

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

ian said:

youngsoulrebel said:

TwIsTeDmInD said:

Thank you all for posting on this thread, in doing so I have put malicious viruses on your computer evillol



*whispers*

Oh thats the next version? Nevermind!


i got a firewall nana

..


Tch, so what razz Most consumer firewall products deliver little more than basic packet filtering and providing feelgood factor. Easily broken, with dedication and patience!

Er, allegedly.


i am sitting behind a hardware firewall, all my ports have been changed
it would take a dedicated hacker, but ofcourse it can be done.

..


Dunno what you mean about "ports being changed" but yeah you are right - for the most part, people hacking ordinary people's PCs are just script kiddies using downloaded tools - they have no patience or interest in breaking into a system with a h/w firewall like yours so I'm sure you're fine. There's really no point in going after more difficult challenges when there are millions of unprotected, unpatched virgin Windows boxes online via broadband...



each port is assigned a default number by microsoft

a software firewall hides your ports

but on a hardware firewall one can actually reconfigure the port number

to be anything you want it to be.

not making it impossible to hack, but it is more secure than leaving it as the default

..


Sorry mate... I don't wish to sound patronizing but this is my profession really and I do know TCP/IP very well and I gotta say what you just said was utter nonsense smile

Okay. TCP/IP allows for running different transport protocols and different services on different ports. That's fine, that's not a security problem that's just the way TCP/IP works. Certain traffic you are always going to want to allow such as port 80 (web) and port 110 (POP3) and port 25 (SMTP).

You misunderstand what a firewall is doing, I think. Really, there is no difference between a software firewall and a hardware firewall aside from the implementation. Hardware firewalls can certainly provider better features than cheap consumer-oriented software firewalls, but a firewall is a firewall regardless of whether it is in hardware or not.



ofcourse a software firewall and hardware firewall work in much the same way, the difference being is that with a hardware firewall one has, only one external ip adress.

and the ports number such as smtp and pop3 can be reconfigured, just as long as they are configured on the client machines as well.

for example, if a server must initiate a smtp session with a receiving server on which the smtp task is listening on port 26, set the smtp outbound port to 26 on the server document of the initiating server.

ports are how hackers break into networks/pc's reconfiguring them is just a small security measure.

..
[This message was edited Sat Sep 6 21:49:02 PDT 2003 by youngsoulrebel]


Sorry mate but that's quite simplistic again. Not sure if you actually get it and are just doing a bad job of explaining it, or if you just don't know what you are talking about smile

I dunno where you got the idea that a hardware firewall can only have one external IP address in comparison to a software firewall. Er, no.

I dunno why you think it is so great to be able to run SMTP on port 26 etc, or why you think it can only be done with a hardware firewall. You can do it in software just as easily, not that it makes much of a difference - any script kiddie worth their salt is gonna run a TCP and UDP port-scanner anyway and other auditing tools. Anyway as we mentioned, most of these kids are only really looking for unprotected, unpatched virgin Windows boxes with Netbios turned on port 135 etc. Plenty of them on the net nowadays.

Realistically, for most ordinary people running internet traffic on non-standard ports is not an option, because you're going to be connecting to other servers on the internet using more common port numbers. Anyway running services on new port numbers could barely be called a security measure, it wouldn't delay any s'kiddie any more more than a few seconds. What's more important is choosing exactly what traffic you want to permit to and from your network - what protocols and port numbers and set up the rules correctly. Believe me, I've seen plenty of very expensive Cisco routers get hacked because of buggy firmware revisions and because of poor configuration.

As for your comment "ports are how hackers break into networks/pc's reconfiguring them is just a small security measure" - errr... I won't even bother commenting on that because it isn't really relevant. Running services on non-standard ports is really not much of a security measure at all because it just isn't that practical. Certainly worth a try as an additional measure if you can, but for most people it isn't a practical solution considering the minimal benefits.

I should probably point out that I am something of a "hacker" myself in the old school sense, and I've been at it since I was a 6 yr old sniffing around VMS machines over 2400bps dialup and digging PSTN switch manuals out of the garbage etc smile Not that I'm admitting to anything illegal mind you, but I do have a feel for how these s'kiddies operate - they've always been around leeching passwds and tools since time immemorial.
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Reply #27 posted 09/06/03 10:10pm

iridescence

avatar

ok, you have both proved you are huge computer geeks. biggrin


this thread is getting kinda sexy. lol
zesty!!!
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Reply #28 posted 09/06/03 10:14pm

Nikster

TwIsTeDmInD said:



Niiice


That is too cool!

Altho..it neglects to point out that the iMac I use is mentally challenged wink
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Reply #29 posted 09/06/03 10:15pm

ian

iridescence said:

ok, you have both proved you are huge computer geeks. biggrin


this thread is getting kinda sexy. lol


woot!

I'mma shut up now coz I don't wanna make the guy look bad in front of his lady... sorry Step I'm out!
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