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[Linux-aus] Sam did better with this one
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/07/02/1056825450368.html
Few people decide on their careers until they are well into
their teens. Russell Coker is an exception. When he built
his first computer, a TEC-1, from a kit, at the age of 11,
he consciously made a career decision as well - he would be
working in that field.
However, the Melbourne-based developer and sysadmin probably
never figured that his name would one day end up on the
website of America's National Security Agency, /the/
cryptologic organisation.
[... sorry for this detour into MS-land but I found it highly
amusing and suspect that many of you will too ...]
I initially removed Windows 3.0 from my computer when a
Microsoft representative told me that it was easier for
them to train people to work around bugs in their software
than to fix them. I deplore this attitude and I
immediately went home, removed Windows from my computer,
removed Windows file areas from my BBS, and have had as
little as possible to do with Microsoft software ever
since.
[...]
I have on many occasions put SE Linux "play" machines on
the net with a public root password. (The details are
here [http://www.coker.com.au/selinux/]). Lots of people
have tried to break them for fun. Several configuration
errors were discovered in the early days, mainly due to
the fact that the earlier policy was not designed to be
used on a machine with public root access. The use of
such machines has resulted in a stronger security
policy, so if someone gains unauthorised root access on
a SE Linux machine they won't be able to do anything
dangerous (and their attempts to damage the machine
will be logged clearly).
Cheers; Leon
--
http://cyberknights.com.au/ Modern tools; traditional dedication
http://plug.linux.org.au/ Committee Member, Perth Linux User Group
http://slpwa.asn.au/ Committee Member, Linux Professionals WA
http://linux.org.au/ Committee Member, Linux Australia