Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Security

Submission + - Myspace Lockdown: Is it possible?

Raxxon writes: "We (my business partner and I) were asked by a local company to help 'tighten up' their security. After looking at a few things we ran some options by the owner and he asked that we attempt to block access to MySpace. He cited reasons of wasted work time as well as some of the nightmare stories about spyware/viruses/etc. Work began and the more I dig into the subject the worse things look. You can block the 19 or 20 Class C Address Blocks that MySpace has, but then you get into problems of sites like "MySpace Bypass" and other such sites that allow you to bypass most of the filtering that's done.

Other than becoming rather invasive (squid with customized screening setups) is there a way to effectively block MySpace from being accessed at a business? What about at home for those who would like to keep their kids off of it? If a dedicated web cache/proxy system is needed how do you prevent things like SSL enabled Proxy sites (denying MySpace but allowing any potentially 'legal' aspects)? In the end is it worth it vs just adopting an Acceptable Use Policy that states that going to MySpace can lead to eventual dismissal from your job?"

Comment CVSTrac (Score 1) 129

We use CVSTrac, and it serves our purposes very well. It's not PHP/MySQL, it's SQLite-based, and is written in C, but to me, that just makes it easier to support -- there is one native process, so just one point of failure, no DB servers to monitor (yet, the data is available in a SQL DB), no web servers to configure (though you can set it up with an external webserver if you wish).

It is free, well-documented and is actively developed. It was written by the same guy who wrote SQLite.

It is also self-hosting, which means that the CVSTrac project uses CVSTrac for issue tracking, so you can go to http://www.cvstrac.org/cvstrac/ and get a good idea of how the system works without ever installing it.

Kernel Trap Interview with Theo de Raadt 181

An anonymous reader writes "KernelTrap has an insightful interview with Theo de Raadt, creator of OpenBSD. The wide-ranging interview focuses first on the past few years of OpenBSD development, then moves on to the recently released OpenBSD 3.9. De Raadt talks about how binary blobs threaten free software, and how OpenBSD developers work to reverse engineer them. He also talks about the future of OpenBSD, his views on Linux, and why developing truly free software is so important to him."

Slashdot Top Deals

"An ounce of prevention is worth a ton of code." -- an anonymous programmer

Working...