Displaying 5 results from an estimated 5 matches for "pasdecharge".
2015 Feb 04
2
Another Fedora decision
...wrote:
> On 2015-02-04, James B. Byrne <byrnejb at harte-lyne.ca> wrote:
> >
> > One might question why *nix distributions insist on providing a known
> > point of attack to begin with. Why does user 0 have to be called
> > root? Why not beatlebailey, cinnamon or pasdecharge?
>
> That is more or less what OS X does. User 0 still exists, and it's
> labelled as "root", but there is no way (unless the owner goes way out
> of his way) to actually log in as root. The first account created is
> given full sudo access, and can choose to grant s...
2015 Feb 04
5
Another Fedora decision
...s, in my
opinion, self-defeating. It is certainly a deceit. Whether it is
self-delusion or overt pretence I have no idea.
One might question why *nix distributions insist on providing a known
point of attack to begin with. Why does user 0 have to be called
root? Why not beatlebailey, cinnamon or pasdecharge? If brute
forcing passwords is the problem then why not make it ever more
difficult by forcing crackers to guess what the superuser name is to
begin with?
Oh, I know. Too much software exists that presumes that the superuser
name is root. Evidently adherence to that convention is valued more
hig...
2015 Feb 04
0
Another Fedora decision
On 2015-02-04, James B. Byrne <byrnejb at harte-lyne.ca> wrote:
>
> One might question why *nix distributions insist on providing a known
> point of attack to begin with. Why does user 0 have to be called
> root? Why not beatlebailey, cinnamon or pasdecharge?
That is more or less what OS X does. User 0 still exists, and it's
labelled as "root", but there is no way (unless the owner goes way out
of his way) to actually log in as root. The first account created is
given full sudo access, and can choose to grant sudo to subsequently
creat...
2015 Feb 04
0
Another Fedora decision
...2015-02-04, James B. Byrne <byrnejb at harte-lyne.ca> wrote:
>> >
>> > One might question why *nix distributions insist on providing a known
>> > point of attack to begin with. Why does user 0 have to be called
>> > root? Why not beatlebailey, cinnamon or pasdecharge?
>>
>> That is more or less what OS X does. User 0 still exists, and it's
>> labelled as "root", but there is no way (unless the owner goes way out
>> of his way) to actually log in as root. The first account created is
>> given full sudo access, and ca...
2015 Feb 04
3
Another Fedora decision
...4, 2015 10:18 am, Keith Keller wrote:
> On 2015-02-04, James B. Byrne <byrnejb at harte-lyne.ca> wrote:
>> One might question why *nix distributions insist on providing a known
point of attack to begin with. Why does user 0 have to be called root?
Why not beatlebailey, cinnamon or pasdecharge?
>
> That is more or less what OS X does. User 0 still exists, and it's
labelled as "root", but there is no way (unless the owner goes way out
of his way) to actually log in as root. The first account created is
given full sudo access, and can choose to grant sudo to subsequen...