two factor authentication – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com Open Source Entertainment, on Demand. Fri, 03 Aug 2018 01:40:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.3 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-favicon-32x32.png two factor authentication – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com 32 32 Two-Factor Fraud | TechSNAP 378 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/126511/two-factor-fraud-techsnap-378/ Thu, 02 Aug 2018 17:40:07 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=126511 Show Notes: techsnap.systems/378

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Show Notes: techsnap.systems/378

The post Two-Factor Fraud | TechSNAP 378 first appeared on Jupiter Broadcasting.

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Network Iodometry | BSD Now 46 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/62542/network-iodometry-bsd-now-46/ Thu, 17 Jul 2014 11:26:02 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=62542 We’re back and this week we’ll be showing you how to tunnel out of a restrictive network using only DNS queries. We also sat down with Bryan Drewery, from the FreeBSD portmgr team, to talk all about their building cluster and some recent changes. All the latest news and answers to your emails, on BSD […]

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We’re back and this week we’ll be showing you how to tunnel out of a restrictive network using only DNS queries.

We also sat down with Bryan Drewery, from the FreeBSD portmgr team, to talk all about their building cluster and some recent changes.

All the latest news and answers to your emails, on BSD Now – the place to B.. SD.

Thanks to:


iXsystems


Tarsnap

Direct Download:

Video | HD Video | MP3 Audio | OGG Audio | Torrent | YouTube

RSS Feeds:

MP3 Feed | OGG Feed | iTunes Feed | Video Feed | HD Vid Feed | HD Torrent Feed

Become a supporter on Patreon:

Foo

– Show Notes: –

Headlines

EuroBSDCon 2014 registration open

  • September is getting closer, and that means it’s time for EuroBSDCon – held in Bulgaria this year
  • Registration is finally open to the public, with prices for businesses ($287), individuals ($217) and students ($82) for the main conference until August 18th
  • Tutorials, sessions, dev summits and everything else all have their own pricing as well
  • Registering between August 18th – September 12th will cost more for everything
  • You can register online here and check hotels in the area
  • The FreeBSD foundation is also accepting applications for travel grants

OpenBSD SMP PF update

  • A couple weeks ago we talked about how DragonflyBSD updated their PF to be multithreaded
  • With them joining the SMP ranks along with FreeBSD, a lot of users have been asking about when OpenBSD is going to make the jump
  • In a recent mailing list thread, Henning Brauer addresses some of the concerns
  • The short version is that too many things in OpenBSD are currently single-threaded for it to matter – just reworking PF by itself would be useless
  • He also says PF on OpenBSD is over four times faster than FreeBSD’s old version, presumably due to those extra years of development it’s gone through
  • There’s also been even more recent concern about the uncertain future of FreeBSD’s PF, being mostly unmaintained since their SMP patches
  • We reached out to four developers (over week ago) about coming on the show to talk about OpenBSD network performance and SMP, but they all ignored us

Introduction to NetBSD pkgsrc

  • An article from one of our listeners about how to create a new pkgsrc port or fix one that you need
  • The post starts off with how to get the pkgsrc tree, shows how to get the developer tools and finally goes through the Makefile format
  • It also lists all the different bmake targets and their functions in relation to the porting process
  • Finally, the post details the whole process of creating a new port

FreeBSD 9.3-RELEASE

  • After three RCs, FreeBSD 9.3 was scheduled to be finalized and announced today but actually came out yesterday
  • The full list of changes is available, but it’s mostly a smaller maintenance release
  • Lots of driver updates, ZFS issues fixed, hardware RNGs are entirely disabled by default, netmap framework updates, read-only ext4 support was added, the vt driver was merged from -CURRENT, new hardware support (including radeon KMS), various userland tools got new features, OpenSSL and OpenSSH were updated… and much more
  • If you haven’t jumped to the 10.x branch yet (and there are a lot of people who haven’t!) this is a worthwhile upgrade – 9.2-RELEASE will reach EOL soon
  • Good news, this will be the first release with PGP-signed checksums on the FTP mirrors – a very welcome change
  • 9.2’s EOL was extended until December of this year
  • With that out of the way, the 10.1-RELEASE schedule was posted

Interview – Bryan Drewery – bdrewery@freebsd.org / @bdrewery

The FreeBSD package building cluster, pkgng, ports, various topics


Tutorial

Tunneling traffic through DNS


News Roundup

SSH two-factor authentication on FreeBSD

  • We’ve previously mentioned stories on how to do two-factor authentication with a Yubikey or via a third party website
  • This blog post tells you how to do exactly that, but with your Google account and the pam_google_authenticator port
  • Using this setup, every user that logs in with a password will have an extra requirement before they can gain access – but users with public keys can login normally
  • It’s a really, really simple process once you have the port installed – full details on the page

Ditch tape backup in favor of FreeNAS

  • The author of this post shares some of his horrible experiences with tape backups for a client
  • Having constant, daily errors and failed backups, he needed to find another solution
  • With 1TB of backups, tapes just weren’t a good option anymore – so he switched to FreeNAS (after also ruling out a pre-built NAS)
  • The rest of the article details his experiences with it and tells about his setup

NetBSD vs FreeBSD, desktop experiences

  • A NetBSD and pkgsrc developer details his experiences running NetBSD on a workstation at his job
  • Becoming more and more disappointed with graphics performance, he finally decides to give FreeBSD 10 a try – especially since it has a native nVidia driver
  • “Running on VAX, PlayStation 2 and Amiga is fun, but I’ll tell you a little secret: nobody cares anymore about VAX, PlayStation 2 and Amiga.”
  • He’s become pretty satisfied with FreeBSD, a modern choice for a 2014 desktop system

PCBSD not-so-weekly digest

  • Speaking of choices for a desktop system, it’s the return of the PCBSD digest!
  • Warden and PBI_add have gotten some interesting new features
  • You can now create jails “on the fly” when adding a new PBI to your application library
  • Bulk jail creation is also possible now, and it’s really easy
  • New Jenkins integration, with public access to Poudriere logs as well (https://builds.pcbsd.org)
  • PkgNG 1.3.0.rc2 testing for EDGE users

Feedback/Questions


  • All the tutorials are posted in their entirety at bsdnow.tv
  • Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv
  • We love hearing from listeners – tell us what you think of the show or what you’d like to see!
  • If you want to come on for an interview or have a tutorial you’d like to see, let us know
  • Congrats to the new FreeBSD core team members
  • The first (and second.. and third..) portable release of LibreSSL is available on the OpenBSD FTP sites, with a brief announcement email
  • Test it on your platform of choice, including building ports against it, and report your findings to either the LibreSSL team or the port maintainers so we can increase compatibility
  • Watch live Wednesdays at 2:00PM Eastern (18:00 UTC)

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Port Authority | BSD Now 26 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/52452/port-authority-bsd-now-26/ Thu, 27 Feb 2014 21:34:25 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=52452 On today\’s show we have an interview with Joe Marcus Clark, one of the original portmgr members in FreeBSD, and one of the key GNOME porters. Keeping along with that topic, we have a FreeBSD ports tutorial for you as well. The latest news and answers to your BSD questions, right here on BSD Now […]

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On today\’s show we have an interview with Joe Marcus Clark, one of the original portmgr members in FreeBSD, and one of the key GNOME porters. Keeping along with that topic, we have a FreeBSD ports tutorial for you as well. The latest news and answers to your BSD questions, right here on BSD Now – the place to B.. SD.

Thanks to:


\"iXsystems\"

Direct Download:

Video | HD Video | MP3 Audio | OGG Audio | Torrent | YouTube

RSS Feeds:

MP3 Feed | OGG Feed | iTunes Feed | Video Feed | HD Vid Feed | HD Torrent Feed

– Show Notes: –

Headlines

Tailoring OpenBSD for an old, strange computer

  • The author of this article had an OmniBook 800CT, which comes with a pop-out mouse, black and white display, 32MB of RAM and a 133MHz CPU
  • Obviously he had to install some kind of BSD on it!
  • This post goes through all his efforts of trimming down OpenBSD to work on such a limited device
  • He goes through the trial and error of \”compile, break it, rebuild, try again\”
  • After cutting a lot out from the kernel, saving a precious megabyte here and there, he eventually gets it working

pkgsrcCon and BSDCan

  • pkgsrccon is \”a technical conference for people working on the NetBSD Packages Collection, focusing on existing technologies, research projects, and works-in-progress in pkgsrc infrastructure\”
  • This year it will be on June 21st and 22nd
  • The schedule is still being worked out, so if you want to give a talk, submit it
  • BSDCan\’s schedule was also announced
  • We\’ll be having presentations about ARM on NetBSD and FreeBSD, PF on OpenBSD, Capsicum and casperd, ASLR in FreeBSD, more about migrating from Linux to BSD, FreeNAS stuff and much more
  • Kris\’ presentation was accepted!
  • Tons of topics, look forward to the recorded versions of all of them hopefully!

Two factor auth with pushover

  • A new write-up from our friend Ted Unangst
  • Pushover is \”a web hook to smartphone push notification gateway\” – you sent a POST to a web server and it sends a code to your phone
  • His post goes through the steps of editing your login.conf and setting it all up to work
  • Now you can get a two factor authenticated login for ssh!

The status of GNOME 3 on BSD

  • It\’s no secret that the GNOME team is a Linux-obsessed bunch, almost to the point of being hostile towards other operating systems
  • OpenBSD keeps their GNOME 3 ports up to date very well, and Antoine Jacoutot writes about his work on that and how easy it is to use
  • This post goes through the process of how simple it is to get GNOME 3 set up on OpenBSD and even includes a screencast
  • A few recent posts from some GNOME developers show that they\’re finally working with the BSD guys to improve portability
  • The FreeBSD and OpenBSD teams are working together to bring the latest GNOME to all of us – it\’s a beautiful thing
  • This goes right along with our interview today!

This episode was brought to you by

\"iXsystems


Interview – Joe Marcus Clark – marcus@freebsd.org

The life and daily activities of portmgr, GNOME 3, Tinderbox, portlint, various topics


Tutorial

The FreeBSD Ports Collection


News Roundup

DragonflyBSD 3.8 goals and 3.6.1 release

  • The Dragonfly team is thinking about what should be in version 3.8
  • On their bug tracker, it lists some of the things they\’d like to get done before then
  • In the meantime, 3.6.1 was released with lots of bugfixes

NYCBSDCon 2014 wrap-up piece

  • We\’ve got a nice wrap-up titled \”NYCBSDCon 2014 Heats Up a Cold Winter Weekend\”
  • The author also interviews GNN about the conference
  • There\’s even a little \”beginner introduction\” to BSD segment
  • Includes a mention of the recently-launched journal and lots of pictures from the event

FreeBSD and Linux, a comparative analysis

  • GNN in yet another story – he gave a presentation at the NYLUG about the differences between FreeBSD and Linux
  • He mentions the history of BSD, the patch set and 386BSD, the lawsuit, philosophy and license differences, a complete system vs \”distros,\” development models, BSD-only features and technologies, how to become a committer, overall comparisons, different hats and roles, the different bsds and their goals and actual code differences
  • Serves as a good introduction you can show your Linux friends

PCBSD CFT and weekly digest

  • Upgrade tools have gotten a major rewrite
  • You have to help test it, there is no choice! Read more here
  • How dare Kris be \”unimpressed with\” freebsd-update and pkgng!?
  • Various updates and fixes

Feedback/Questions

  • Jeffrey writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s213KxUdVj
  • Shane writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s20lwkjLVK
  • Ferdinand writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s21DqJs77g
  • Curtis writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s20eXKEqJc
  • Clint writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s21XMVFuVu
  • Peter writes in: https://slexy.org/view/s20Xk05MHe

  • All the tutorials are posted in their entirety at bsdnow.tv
  • Send questions, comments, show ideas/topics, or stories you want mentioned on the show to feedback@bsdnow.tv
  • Our email backlog is totally caught up now, so email us all your questions!
  • Watch live Wednesdays at 2:00PM Eastern (19:00 UTC)

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