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April 11th, 2005, 10:17 AM
#23
Originally posted here by IKnowNot
Did you upgrade your kernel ?
Have you ever built a custom kernel ? ( then upgraded to a stock kernel? )
Is it possible that your distro used to build all available targets as modules, then with the latest kernel stopped building it? ( I know FC3 does not build it with a default kernel, you have to build the kernel yourself. Maybe since updates for RH9 are now handled by Fedora Legacy they have done the same thing.)
I have upgraded my kernel recently, and I'm sure that's what caused the problem. Both kernels were stock kernels and I'm now running FC3 on the box. It's not too much of a problem, I'm just using a DROP target now, but as I said, I got a preverse sense of satisfaction thinking of the skiddies slowly realinsing they were looking at data from their own box.
Originally posted here by hellforgedangel
Im not sure exactly but I think in the UK at least they count a counter attack as a seperate attack therefore making anything in the attack that would be illegal if you started it ilegal and you liable for any damages, also as posted its not always the bad guy
I beg to differ. I have not performed any action whatsoever, not have I configured any of my systems to perform any attacks or counter attacks. I have simply returned any packets sent to me back to the sender, but since I'm using a DROP target the issue isn't relevant.
Stev
IT, e-commerce, Retail, Programme & Project Management, EPoS, Supply Chain and Logistic Services. Yorkshire. http://www.bigi.uk.com
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