On Wed, Jul 28, 2004 at 09:51:54PM +0200, Brent Frère wrote:
On Sat, 24 Jul 2004, Jay Christnach wrote:
Why should they block an ssh outgoing connection?
At BEI - EIB (European Investment Bank), even port 443 is blocked, which
means that for security reasons, the SECURE http port (https) is not
allowed...
This way, the use of sites exchanging sensitive information is not
possible, or you have to switch to the unsecure mode (http) if available...
For me, as long as this is the policy applied to a private network, it's
OK. It's the choice of the company to decide what service is provided to
the employee. But for ISPs, it's not acceptable. If all ports that might
contains potentially risks are closed, then there is no more Internet
access. More than that, I consider some providers, such as BCE, Colt,
MCI, Equant, Alternet as telecom providers, not simple end-users ISPs,
and thus they are giving TOTAL FREE access to the Internet. That's what
I'm expecting from an Internet connection, but I'm not a "normal"
end-user...
I fully agree with you Brent : Internet acces means INTERNET access not port 25, 80 and
110 access ;)
ciao,
pst
Just my 0.1 eurocent
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