On 03/26/2015 07:38 PM, Paul E Condon wrote:
I'm running Jessie, as close to plain vanilla as my hardware allows.
I have a HP Laserjet 5MP. This is an ancient device. It has built-in
firmware for Level 2 Postscript printing and a special socket for
Apple Localtalk connection, but no USB. It is a
On 27/03/2015, Bob Proulx wrote:
> Bret Busby wrote:
>> I have an external USB HDD connected to a system running Debian 6 LTS.
>
> I don't really have any great contribution. But since no one else
> seems to have any good response I will contribute what I know.
>
> I have never had good luck with
On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 09:09:28PM -0600, Paul E Condon wrote:
> ...some BIOS code that blocks copying a backup copy of Win7 in
> a hidden partition on HD...
Now, see? That's some hardcore M$ crap right there! Thas what
I'm talkin 'bout!
> To get rid of this hidden partition, you will have to
On 20150326_1551-0400, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> Shortly I will become the owner of a refurbished Dell with Win7 already on
> its 160g sata hard drive.
>
> I have no need or use for a multi-OS multi-boot machine. I only want wheezy
> on this for now.
>
> Question: can I entrust to the Debian install
On 20150325_1530-0400, mizuki wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Since Mar 10th, I seem to have trouble installing Debian testing on a
> virtual machine or a physical machine, always fails at step 'Partition
> disk' with partman, it complains:
>
> The attempt to mount a file system with type ext4 in SCSI1(0,0,0),
I recently upgraded, but my users are not able to log in.
They get the ‘Oh no, something went wrong’ message.
.xsession_errors of a new, clean user:
/etc/gdm3/Xsession: Beginning session setup...
localuser:t being added to access control list
openConnection: connect: Arquivo ou diretório não enco
On 03/26/2015 04:38 PM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
Shortly I will become the owner of a refurbished Dell
with Win7 already on its 160g sata hard drive.
I have no need or use for a multi-OS multi-boot
machine. I only want wheezy on this for now.
I hated dual-boot -- getting it working was painful eno
Michael Graham wrote:
> Reco wrote:
> > Ow. Exactly which kind of consumer-grade hardware comes with SSL bump
> > preinstalled? That's very interesting to me as I like know which
> > hardware to avoid in the future.
>
> It's way more common than you seem to think. CERT recently did a blog post
> a
I'm running Jessie, as close to plain vanilla as my hardware allows.
I have a HP Laserjet 5MP. This is an ancient device. It has built-in
firmware for Level 2 Postscript printing and a special socket for
Apple Localtalk connection, but no USB. It is a sturdy old beast and
was running nicely until q
On Thu, 26 Mar 2015, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> Shortly I will become the owner of a refurbished Dell
> with Win7 already on its 160g sata hard drive.
>
> I have no need or use for a multi-OS multi-boot
> machine. I only want wheezy on this for now.
Make a Restore disk of W7 anyway. Get the codes
On Thu, 26 Mar 2015 17:18 Reco wrote:
>
> Hi.
>
> On Thu, 26 Mar 2015 12:44:11 -0700
> rog...@queernet.org wrote:
>
> > On 3/26/15 12:42 PM, Michael Graham wrote:
> > > On 26 March 2015 at 14:18, Reco wrote:
> > >> Then it's even worse that I thought. I don't know about Germany, but
> > >> wh
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
On 03/25/2015 12:30 PM, mizuki wrote:
> The attempt to mount a file system with type ext4 in SCSI1(0,0,0),
> partition #1 (sda) at / failed. You may resume partitioning from
> the partitioning menu.
>
I've never had this problem and honestly ha
rog...@queernet.org wrote:
> Michael Graham wrote:
> > As MITM proxies in school/business seem to be pretty common in the
> > US and the UK.
>
> I bet your proxy firewall does it too.
I bet not! I think you are confusing https with http. We are talking
about https here not http. And even then
Hi.
On Thu, 26 Mar 2015 12:44:11 -0700
rog...@queernet.org wrote:
> On 3/26/15 12:42 PM, Michael Graham wrote:
> > On 26 March 2015 at 14:18, Reco wrote:
> >> Then it's even worse that I thought. I don't know about Germany, but
> >> where I live tampering with public communications is considere
Bret Busby wrote:
> I have an external USB HDD connected to a system running Debian 6 LTS.
I don't really have any great contribution. But since no one else
seems to have any good response I will contribute what I know.
I have never had good luck with USB connected hard drives. They work
for a
Christoph Pleger wrote:
> I want to boot a computer from network by PXE, with an NFS filesystem as
> root fs, install a basic system on the local disk and then boot the
> computer from the disk. After booting from disk, the names of the network
> interfaces should be the same as before with the NFS
Yes, all tools you need to formatting is included in the iso.
/M
On 26 Mar 2015 21:03, "Bob Bernstein" wrote:
> Shortly I will become the owner of a refurbished Dell with Win7 already on
> its 160g sata hard drive.
>
> I have no need or use for a multi-OS multi-boot machine. I only want
> wheezy
Shortly I will become the owner of a refurbished Dell
with Win7 already on its 160g sata hard drive.
I have no need or use for a multi-OS multi-boot
machine. I only want wheezy on this for now.
Question: can I entrust to the Debian installer the
task of repartitioning and formatting the HD w
On Thu 26 Mar 2015 at 19:45:27 +, Ricardo Cardante wrote:
> Hi there. I have a Toshiba Satellite S50-B-131. Is my wifi driver supported?
> Thanks in advance.
Definitely.
Get back to us when you have set it up successfully.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
Ricardo Cardante writes:
> Hi there. I have a Toshiba Satellite S50-B-131. Is my wifi driver supported?
> Thanks in advance.
I don't have one but some looking online suggests that it has the Intel
AC 3160 which should work if you install firmware-iwlwifi from non-free,
and a newer kernel like je
Hi there. I have a Toshiba Satellite S50-B-131. Is my wifi driver supported?
Thanks in advance.
On 3/26/15 12:42 PM, Michael Graham wrote:
On 26 March 2015 at 14:18, Reco wrote:
Then it's even worse that I thought. I don't know about Germany, but
where I live tampering with public communications is considered a
criminal offense. I strongly suggest you to seek a legal advice before
doing a
On 26 March 2015 at 14:18, Reco wrote:
> Then it's even worse that I thought. I don't know about Germany, but
> where I live tampering with public communications is considered a
> criminal offense. I strongly suggest you to seek a legal advice before
> doing anything like SSL bump.
Just out of cu
Reco wrote:
> On Thu, 26 Mar 2015 18:18:24 +0100 "Michael I."
> wrote:
>> for private usage I am think a filter isn't good, children need trust
>> and a filter is the opposite of trust.
>>
>> But in usage for a school I think a filter is better, a teacher can't
>> look on all computers. The ki
Hi.
On Thu, 26 Mar 2015 18:18:24 +0100
"Michael I." wrote:
> Hello,
>
> for private usage I am think a filter isn't good, children need trust
> and a filter is the opposite of trust.
>
> But in usage for a school I think a filter is better, a teacher can't
> look on all computers. The kids
Michael I. wrote:
> This are not my children, the filter is used for a school.
Aha, important information.
Do not proceed any further with breaking encrypted connections or, for
the matter, transparently proxiing _any_ connections until you had a
talk with a) the Justitiar and b) the Datenschut
On Thu, 26 Mar 2015 08:49:37 -0500, John Hasler wrote:
> Why don't you just get rid of the computers?
I tried that route one time ... got looked at like I had 7 heads for even
suggesting that the kids go back to "textbooks and paper".
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.deb
Hello,
for private usage I am think a filter isn't good, children need trust
and a filter is the opposite of trust.
But in usage for a school I think a filter is better, a teacher can't
look on all computers. The kids are trying out thinks in school which is
good but when nobody is there to
Sven Hartge wrote:> Michael I.
wrote:
Sven Hartge wrote:
Michael I. wrote:
But I have a new problem, I want to have a transparent proxy for
http this works fine but when I add the iptables rule for https the
loading won't work.
Of course not. That this is not working is the _whole point
Hi.
On Thu, 26 Mar 2015 16:48:00 +0100
Peter Viskup wrote:
> Hello Reco,
>
> On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 4:13 PM, Reco wrote:
>
> > Hi.
> > And just as well child can see a naughty picture on TV. Or a phone ad.
> > Or a magazine/newspaper. Anywhere, once you start thinking about it.
> >
>
> An
On 2015-03-20 12:13:12 -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Friday 20 March 2015 08:45:13 Vincent Lefevre wrote:
> > No, it is not commented out. ./etc/apache2/mods-available/ssl.conf
> > in apache2.2-common_2.2.22-13+deb7u4_amd64.deb contains:
^^
> >
> >
Hello Reco,
On Thu, Mar 26, 2015 at 4:13 PM, Reco wrote:
> Hi.
> And just as well child can see a naughty picture on TV. Or a phone ad.
> Or a magazine/newspaper. Anywhere, once you start thinking about it.
>
And that's just sad, disturbingly and one of the main reasons of so many
people facin
Hi.
On Thu, 26 Mar 2015 14:29:08 +0100
Peter Viskup wrote:
> It's the way you look at.
> For me it's about prevention...your child can click on some link somewhere
> and see some pictures/videos which will remain in his/her mind (let's say)
> forever and can harm even if it was only seconds the
Why don't you just get rid of the computers?
--
John Hasler
jhas...@newsguy.com
Elmwood, WI USA
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive: https://lists.debian.org/87y4mjswb2@thump
Peter Viskup wrote:
> It's the way you look at. For me it's about prevention...your child
> can click on some link somewhere and see some pictures/videos which
> will remain in his/her mind (let's say) forever and can harm even if
> it was only seconds they were seen...I am speaking about childr
Michael I. wrote:
> Sven Hartge wrote:
>> Michael I. wrote:
>>> But I have a new problem, I want to have a transparent proxy for
>>> http this works fine but when I add the iptables rule for https the
>>> loading won't work.
>>
>> Of course not. That this is not working is the _whole point_ of
It's the way you look at.
For me it's about prevention...your child can click on some link somewhere
and see some pictures/videos which will remain in his/her mind (let's say)
forever and can harm even if it was only seconds they were seen...I am
speaking about children less than 15 years old...and
Without the SSL splitting the only option is to install some software on
the client side. Some "endpoint" security software doing the inspection of
the web data transfers on the fly before they pass the TLS tunnel. It's the
same like SSL split on Squid, but let's say more transparent. Unfortunately
I agree 100% with Reco.
Don't use technical Stuff to protect your children.
Learn them to use their Brain, to protect their self.
It's the most important thing, when u sit in front of a Computer.
When u want to block adult content u have to block 80% of the entire visible
web.
And you will spend y
Sven Hartge wrote:
Michael I. wrote:
But I have a new problem, I want to have a transparent proxy for http
this works fine but when I add the iptables rule for https the loading
won't work.
Of course not. That this is not working is the _whole point_ of any
end-to-end encrypted connection.
Hi.
On Thu, 26 Mar 2015 13:21:57 +0100
Peter Viskup wrote:
> Hi,
> just jumped into SSLBump/Split features some months ago. I don't find these
> features harmful. Especially when protecting your children from access of
> YouTube or other possibly harmful sites. Once you are logged with Google
>
Hi,
just jumped into SSLBump/Split features some months ago. I don't find these
features harmful. Especially when protecting your children from access of
YouTube or other possibly harmful sites. Once you are logged with Google
account they redirect your communication to https which makes the
inspec
Michael I. wrote:
> But I have a new problem, I want to have a transparent proxy for http
> this works fine but when I add the iptables rule for https the loading
> won't work.
Of course not. That this is not working is the _whole point_ of any
end-to-end encrypted connection.
What you are ef
Hello it's me again,
thanks for the hint with wget, this was very useful.
The problem with not redirect https to an errorpage is not solved but
this is okay. It's only a nice to have feature to redirect to an errorpage.
But I have a new problem, I want to have a transparent proxy for http
th
On Wed, Mar 25, 2015 at 04:46:44PM +0100, Christoph Pleger wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I want to boot a computer from network by PXE, with an NFS filesystem as
> root fs, install a basic system on the local disk and then boot the
> computer from the disk. After booting from disk, the names of the network
45 matches
Mail list logo