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Forums » Up and Running » Security » Security » Security Absurdity: A long-overdue wake up call
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« Is there a harmeless virus that I can sent to myself to test  
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N O Y B
St. John 3.16

join:2005-12-15
Forest Grove, OR

edit:
May 16th, @07:18PM

reply to Kiwi
Re: Security Absurdity: A long-overdue wake up call

Not all road are state owned. Applies to privately owned roads too.

ISPs are a private road to the public internet.

Kiwi
Premium
join:2003-05-26
USA
·Comcast
·Aristotle Internet

said by N O Y B See Profile :

Not all road are state owned. Applies to privately owned roads too.

ISPs are a private road to the public internet.
Because I feel like a 'Shindig' @ this moment, good comeback But, one outa check the share quota's on their 'Private' ISP It still does not excuse people who don't attempt to practice safe hex. This World is far more advanced in this day & time, with respect to the internet and some prudent precautions are not necessary, but mandatory; or one will quickly lose their identity in a most literal sense.

Ownership is still the problem of the surfer, not the ISP!

Cheers


N O Y B
St. John 3.16

join:2005-12-15
Forest Grove, OR
·Verizon FIOS
·Comcast

Yes, one should practice defensive driving so to speak. But there is still the other half of the equation which is the ISP should not knowingly allow illegal use of their network.

Moving off the road thing.

Suppose a corporation knowingly permits the use of their resources for illegal activity and does nothing meaningfully significant to prevent such activity, should they not be held responsible for resulting damages?

ISPs currently do knowingly permit the use of their resources (their privately owned and operated network) for illegal activity and in many cases could put automated systems in place to detect, block and shutdown offending customer connections.

devicenull
Premium
join:2002-12-01
Clifton, NJ

You have to be very careful automatically shutting down clients. What if I want to run a Nessus or Nmap scan on a server I own? With any type of automated system, you run the risk of it flagging that and taking action.. Server could have many IP addresses with different services on each..

Kiwi
Premium
join:2003-05-26
USA
·Comcast
·Aristotle Internet

reply to N O Y B
said by N O Y B See Profile :

Suppose a corporation knowingly permits the use of their resources for illegal activity and does nothing meaningfully significant to prevent such activity, should they not be held responsible for resulting damages?

ISPs currently do knowingly permit the use of their resources (their privately owned and operated network) for illegal activity and in many cases could put automated systems in place to detect, block and shutdown offending customer connections.
That's another and entirely separate issue, Network Administrators are accountable for knowing their job. Permissions and Admin rights are controlled, or should be. I think you are not entirely realistic in what an Admin does or is, in a corporate environment.

An ISP provides access to the net, they are not the Police.

Most users could do with censorship @ least @ some level, even on their own PC! Too many really stupid click happy idiots running around, infecting everyone with AIDS -Artificial & Indecent Decisions Serviced

Some people should simply be licensed, before they are allowed to access the net. But it's still not an ISP issue.

.


N O Y B
St. John 3.16

join:2005-12-15
Forest Grove, OR
·Verizon FIOS
·Comcast

reply to devicenull
said by devicenull See Profile :

You have to be very careful automatically shutting down clients. What if I want to run a Nessus or Nmap scan on a server I own? With any type of automated system, you run the risk of it flagging that and taking action.. Server could have many IP addresses with different services on each..
And why would it ever need to repeatedly pound on mine or anyone’s firewall with unsolicited traffic?


N O Y B
St. John 3.16

join:2005-12-15
Forest Grove, OR
·Verizon FIOS
·Comcast

reply to Kiwi
I didn’t say anything about network administrators. I said corporations.

I didn’t say ISP are the police. But neither am I, but I and they as well can be held accountable for negligence, i.e. knowingly permitting someone to use their resources (network) in pursuit of illegal activity.
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