Is that involved in this NSA scheming too? If so, I have completely missed that.
Personally I have three levels:
- On exposed machines it is disabled. This includes my BitFolk vps.
- On machines in my private network I have barely no security at all, simple (easy to
type) passwords for the user and sudo enabled.
- On machines for work, shared with others, I leave the default
setting for that flavour of *nix. Half trusting the network team to have the (sub-)
network fairly secured, half trusting the other users (often sharing the local user name
due to the nature of the work we are doing) knowing what they are doing (and to change the
default for that Unix flavour would need us to have a company wide policy for what is
supposed to be instead. Which we don't have.)
__
/ony
-------
Wednesday, September 11, 2013, 8:57:39 AM, Andrew wrote:
What about sudo?
I'd be interested to know how many people have it
disabled.