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Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Howtos:
Setting Up A Highly Available NFS Server

Roll Your Own Firewall

Detecting Botnets Using a Low Interaction Honeypot

Monday, March 27, 2006

Procfs from the inside

Friday, March 24, 2006


If you can't see it, go here.....!!!

Thursday, March 23, 2006

From SiliconValley.com
Q U O T E D
"Bugzilla Bug 330884:

Summary: When different users on one system choose to save or not save passwords for sites, any other user can see sites they not only saved passwords for but can also see what other users have been saving/never saving passwords for.

Reproducible: Always

Steps to Reproduce:
1. Create 2 unique user accounts (for steps sake, let's call the two accounts Joe and Mary) in Windows XP Home.
2. Logout and sign-in under Joe.
3. Open Firefox and go to an e-mail site or to jdate.com or wherever.
4. Attempt to log-in to the site so that Firefox will ask whether or not you want your password saved.
5. Choose not to save the password.
6. After successfully logging in and having selected the "never save password" option, logout.
7. Log-in as Mary and open Firefox.
8. Browse, browse, browse ... but you don't really have to. Just go to "View Saved Passwords," click on the tab that will show you sites to never save passwords for, and you'll see whatever painful site Joe denied to save a password for.
9. Break-up with fiancé."
-- A Firefox user who now has the free time to follow up on browser privacy issues"
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Zeppoo - i386 Rootkit Detection Tool for Linux

Zeppoo is a tool that detects rootkits on i386 Linux. It also detects hidden tasks, modules, syscalls, corrupted symbols and hidden connections.

To download the tool: http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/zeppoo/zeppoo-0.0.2.tar.gz?download

Additional Information:
The information has been provided by contact.
To keep updated with the tool visit the project's homepage at: http://www.zeppoo.net

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Access the Linux kernel using the /proc filesystem

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Tips to Secure Linux Workstation

The Perfect Linux Firewall Part II– IPCop & Copfilter

CLI Magic: Monitoring bandwidth from the command line

How to Run Linux on a USB Drive