On Fri, May 13, 2022 at 11:44:52AM -0000, Curt wrote: > On 2022-05-13, <to...@tuxteam.de> <to...@tuxteam.de> wrote: > > > >> > It's just the basic antipattern you can see everywhere in surveillance > > >> You seem to be seeing these antipatterns at the drop of any hat. > > > > Uh -- whatever you mean to say with that. > > I meant that you applied (or employed) the term quite recently in a > completely unrelated thread about openssh, and David Wright's > observation that logging in remotely as root can be problematic.
Hm. It seems I was unclear. Trying to fix it (hopefully *not* making it worse): - I do agree that logging in as root remotely can be problematic (especially when root has a weak password). So I think it is a good thing for the admin to be able to disable that. - I think the software forcing the admin to do that would be an antipattern. OpenSSH *doesn't* force the admin to do that, so it *doesn't* follow that antipattern. Cheers -- t
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