> Shodan has existed for years and does practically the same thing (enumerates services, etc), but to a far greater extent. Good point. But it's not laser-focused on a single thing and making that thing as easy as…
> The site operator has done nothing that has not already been done before, and it's little more than a basic nmap scan for services (which anyone can do). I realise this. Which is why I carefully phrased the objection…
This feels unethical to me. I've just seen a VNC session on a machine running some PLC software (I've flagged it). There could be god knows what running open VNC sessions in here, and it feels unethical to expose this…
The reason we say "Ubuntu" is that it's all we've had time to test against. I'm pretty sure the way we're presenting the repository metadata will work against Debian et. al., but I haven't tried it. The goal is to…
> Shodan has existed for years and does practically the same thing (enumerates services, etc), but to a far greater extent. Good point. But it's not laser-focused on a single thing and making that thing as easy as…
> The site operator has done nothing that has not already been done before, and it's little more than a basic nmap scan for services (which anyone can do). I realise this. Which is why I carefully phrased the objection…
This feels unethical to me. I've just seen a VNC session on a machine running some PLC software (I've flagged it). There could be god knows what running open VNC sessions in here, and it feels unethical to expose this…
The reason we say "Ubuntu" is that it's all we've had time to test against. I'm pretty sure the way we're presenting the repository metadata will work against Debian et. al., but I haven't tried it. The goal is to…