Hi all, Though this bug is an old one, it is still applicable to at least Red Hat 4.0 on Intel and ALPHA, and probably other distributions. It may even extend to other Unix implementations as well, although we have not tested them (at all or thoroughly). Create a user with user id 65536. When logging in as this user, running the id command will yield root (in other words, there are only 16 bits in a uid). /etc/securetty and ftp restrictions are bypassed when connecting through the net. The ''r'' commands may allow access or not, this appear to be implementation dependend. Does this ''feature'' apply to other platforms/Unix versions as well? [mod: We try not to publish old stuff. On the other hand, as a reminder to "younger" people I think a single message about an older issue could be warranted. I DON"T want any discussion about this "problem". This is just a statement of fact. OK? Traditionally Unix systems use 16 bit numbers to represent uids. This leads to the observed behaviour. Wether or not the "r" commands and deamons use a 16 bit uid (and consider this uid == 0) or incorrectly use a 32 bit uid is an implementation question, and will differ from system to system. -- REW] Arthur Donkers Le Reseau arthur@reseau.nl Arjan Vos KPMG EDP Auditors avos@kpmg.nl (work) arjan@pino.demon.nl (private)