You both raise valid points - if you pays your money, you can do whatever you want with the product you purchased (within EULA limits, of course). There are some very strong opinions here regarding what you should allow through a firewall. The fact that Andy chooses to mix his tenses in his own environment is his choice (and hard to defend when he tries to account for it come tax time). The point I was trying to make is that Andrew, when offered fishing tackle, only repeated his demands for a fish. This, more than anything else, is what garners him my less-than-friendly responses. ------------------------------------------------------- Jim Harrison MCP(NT4, W2K), A+, Network+, PCG http://isaserver.org/Jim_Harrison/ http://isatools.org Read the help / books / articles! ------------------------------------------------------- -----Original Message----- From: Ball, Dan [mailto:DBall@xxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, April 07, 2005 09:30 To: [ISAserver.org Discussion List] Subject: [isalist] RE: Protocol question http://www.ISAserver.org I have to agree with you, there is nothing stopping someone from purchasing ISA server for home use (except maybe money) and wanting to use it as their "personal" firewall. And, as a result, there is no reason why they can't use it for gaming, and request help in doing so. I think it is a valid question, how to get a certain software program to run through an ISA server, whatever the software program may be. People shouldn't have to hide what program it is simply to avoid ridicule/flaming. However, it also the right of the list managers to specify if they want to provide support for such uses. If the people in charge of this mailing list decide they don't want to discuss such topics, they can ban it, but it should be clearly stated. And don't get me started on that certification crap... *grin* -----Original Message----- From: Kenny Mann [mailto:nazadus@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, April 07, 2005 12:00 To: [ISAserver.org Discussion List] Subject: [isalist] RE: Protocol question http://www.ISAserver.org So, does running IIS count as violation of a privacy statement too? What about PHP on that web server? (Remember the PHP vuln recently?) Does running *any* software that is not 100% security guaranteed count towards breaching the contract? (we all know that no software is secure... Or at least, that should be our attitudes towards it... I think) Personally, I'm caught (emotionally) towards your feelings and his. I don't think I've ever heard of someone getting hacked *only* because they played some online game. Usually it's from their web server or running something not properly secured or something inherently insecure piece of software. Online games are not inherently insecure or you would hear about people's machines being zombies because of this. Am I missing something? What I'm questioning is the validity of your statements because I don't understand. I'm also no security expert either, so perhaps I'm just ignorant of something. What this guy has is a mixed situation. He has ISA on a business AND home network. Not everyone has Fortune 100 clients, so I'm sure they know they are getting what they pay for (well, I'm going out on a limb here... A flakey fhakey limb that may hurt me... But for the sake of a good argument, because this has been brought up before). If ISA is *only* for business, then perhaps Microsoft (and perhaps more on this list) should advocate it as such. Now, I do recall someone asking on the forums and their was a thread about games that had a pretty comprehensive list... It's been my experience (coming from a non-certified person/admin/thing-a-ma-bopper) that getting ISA to let stuff out (IE: open port button) can be rather difficult because not everythign is obvious. Yes, ideally, you want your admin certified, but not every company can afford it (heck, they hired me when I knew *nothing* for crying out loud!) I'm not trying to attack you (sorry, if it comes off as such), John, but I'm just trying to get the conversation a little deeper. Kenny Mann ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server FAQ: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/larticle.asp?type=FAQ ------------------------------------------------------ Other Internet Software Marketing Sites: World of Windows Networking: http://www.windowsnetworking.com Leading Network Software Directory: http://www.serverfiles.com No.1 Exchange Server Resource Site: http://www.msexchange.org Windows Security Resource Site: http://www.windowsecurity.com/ Network Security Library: http://www.secinf.net/ Windows 2000/NT Fax Solutions: http://www.ntfaxfaq.com ------------------------------------------------------ You are currently subscribed to this ISAserver.org Discussion List as: jim@xxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe visit http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx All mail to and from this domain is GFI-scanned.