Re: OT - (Simple Solution for Anthrax Letters)

From: Paul Borghese (pborghese@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Oct 18 2001 - 16:10:31 GMT-3


   
You forgot a few very important command. You should always have the
following on every router:

no service tcp-small-servers
no service udp-small-servers
service password-encryption
no service terrorist-attack

Hey does anyone know if you can have a biohazard access-list on a Catalyst?

Paul

----- Original Message -----
From: "Brian Dennis" <brian@5g.net>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>; "Paul Borghese" <pborghese@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2001 3:02 PM
Subject: Re: OT - (Simple Solution for Anthrax Letters)

> Paul,
> Just use an access-list on your mailbox.
>
>
> access-list 2101 deny anthrax any any log
> access-list 2101 permit biohazard any any
>
> int mailbox 0
> postal address 1010 Main St. San Jose, CA 95120
> biohazard access-list 2101 in
>
>
> The only problem is that Cisco doesn't support the biohazard access-list
for PO boxes.
>
> Brian Dennis, CCIE #2210 (R&S)(ISP/Dial) CCSI #98640
> 5G Networks, Inc.
> brian@5g.net
>
> ---------- Original Message ----------------------------------
> From: "Paul Borghese" <pborghese@groupstudy.com>
> Reply-To: "Paul Borghese" <pborghese@groupstudy.com>
> Date: Thu, 18 Oct 2001 14:06:11 -0400
>
> >No no no no!
> >
> >It turns out Anthrax may be destroyed through radiation. So the solution
is
> >to use radiation on the mail - and there are systems that you can
purchase
> >to do just that. The problem is they are a couple million dollars. This
> >came up during a discussion with an "expert" on one of the
> >All-Anthrax-All-the-Time cable stations.
> >
> >The host asked if placing the mail in the microwave would have the same
> >effect. The guest did not know the answer, but you have to admit it is a
> >compelling idea.
> >
> >So I plan to microwave my mail :-)
> >
> >Paul



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