on this guide i assume that you have already a running CSF”ConfigServer Security&Firewall”/LFD”Login Failure Daemon” on your server,
1) register to http://www.no-ip.com/
2) Host – Manage – Add Host3) Install NO ip Software on your PC4) login to your server via WHM or Putty”any terminal of your choice” built in terminal for linux users,
5) locate and edit ConfigServerenable DYNDNS option to 1
6) locate and edit csf.dyndnsadd your virtual host
7) Restart CSF
this guide is only usefull on secured server, this problem will help you minimize login lockdown, like if your FTP client have autologin and you have been blocked from your server
due to multiple wrong login info, all webmaster and developers should benifit on this, and minimize sysads workload by asking for IP unblock :) the good thing about this
is if you have dynamic ip and you change your ip everytime you restart your router and you dont need to pay for static ip s..... Read more
These could be considered the “thou shalt nots” of the new hacker ethic, as opposed to its affirmative “you shoulds.” Some of these transgressions of the hacker ethic are already implied by some of its basic affirmative principles. We can get an idea of what hackers believe they should do, based on what they reject as unsuitable activities of their peers.
1. Bootlegging Commercialism; selling pirated software; hacking for profit; selling out. Bootlegging violates the new ethic of sharing and the original hacker ethic which eschewed profit (and embraced personal satisfaction) as a reason for creating software (hence the existence of Richard Stallman’s GNU Free Software Foundation.)
On occasion the possibility of making a profit from these advances tempts hackers into commercialism. On other occasions, they see commercialism as the only way to get their work into the hands of the masses. When they succeed they become rich, and usually get moved further and f..... Read more
1. “Above all else, do no harm” Do not damage computers or data if at all possible. Much like the key element of the Hippocratic Oath.
According to the “hacker ethic,” a hack must: * be safe
* not damage anything
* not damage anyone, either physically, mentally or emotionally
* be funny, at least to most of the people who experience it
It is against hacker ethics to alter any data aside from the logs that are needed to clean their tracks. They have no need or desire to destroy data as the malicious crackers. They are there to explore the system and learn more. The hacker has a constant yearning and thirst for knowledge that increases in intensity as their journey progresses.
2. The belief that system-cracking for fun and exploration is ethically OK as long as the cracker commits no theft, vandalism, or breach of confidentiality.
Of course, the key problem with this ethical position is its stance on intent. One should not damage data deliberately. But what if, ..... Read more
Hands On Imperative: Access to computers and hardware should be complete and total. It is asserted to be a categorical imperative to remove any barriers between people and the use and understanding of any technology, no matter how large, complex, dangerous, labyrinthine, proprietary, or powerful.
As we can see, this has not been the case. The computer system has been solely in the hands of big businesses and the government. The wonderful device meant to enrich life has become a weapon which dehumanizes people. To the government and large businesses, people are no more than disk space, and the government doesn’t use computers to arrange aid for the poor, but to control nuclear death weapons. The average American can only have access to a small microcomputer which is worth only a fraction of what they pay for it. The businesses keep the true state of the art equipment away from the people behind a steel wall of incredibly high prices and bur..... Read more
Hackers (Crackers, system intruders) – These are people who attempt to penetrate security systems on remote computers. This is the new sense of the term, whereas the old sense of the term simply referred to a person who was capable of creating hacks, or elegant, unusual, and unexpected uses of technology. Typical magazines (both print and online) read by hackers include 2600 and Iron Feather Journal.
Phreaks (Phone Phreakers, Blue Boxers) – These are people who attempt to use technology to explore and/or control the telephone system. Originally, this involved the use of “blue boxes” or tone generators, but as the phone company began using digital instead of electro-mechanical switches, the phreaks became more like hackers. Typical magazines read by Phreaks include Phrack, Line Noize, and New Fone Express.
Virus writers (also, creators of Trojans, worms, logic bombs) – These are people who write code which attempts to a) reproduce itself on ..... Read more