Oh noes! That's my default password for r00t /admin everywhere. I'll need to think of a new short password that I can misspell that the brute force d00ds will never hax0r.
Sounds like just another coke-headed marketing phrase that usually accomplishes just the opposite of the claimed benefits.
hastlefree â> more hastle
more security â> less security
...
Like, if yer running an SMB move into the cloud...
Rent software (don't buy it)
Kill yourself.
"kill yourself" wat's dat all about, you lunatic?
hastle
Oh noes! That's my default password for r00t /admin everywhere. I'll need to think of a new short password that I can misspell that the brute force d00ds will never hax0r.
Classic. I don't know anything about it and am trying to keep it that way, but we have other protections in place that I think are more robust anyway.
I just emailed the only guy who might know anything about it (the login info), who sold his business and retired but rumor has it he used the same password everywhere so how's that for security? :rolleyes:
I once found a whole office setup with user:Password, password:ADMIN. about 30 machines.
Search the web for fortynet active exploits ...and you find plenty in use and even more NOT being fixed, as usual.
Classic. I don't know anything about it and am trying to keep it that way, but we have other protections in place that I think are more robust anyway.
I just emailed the only guy who might know anything about it (the login info), who sold his business and retired but rumor has it he used the same password everywhere so how's that for security? :rolleyes:
We waited until the end of the day and just shut down the Fortigate firewall box and that was the problem. We didn't want it to lock everybody out because nobody knows its password! :roflol:
We waited until the end of the day and just shut down the Fortigate firewall box and that was the problem. We didn't want it to lock everybody out because nobody knows its password! :roflol:
OMG!!!
Firewall rules was the next thing I was gonna come up with but you'd already escalated it "off your desk".
from a command prompt netstat -r will return the routing table. Be sure there is a gateway in there. you can also do a tracert to an external address, I'd do both name and IP to see if you are getting dns resolution. Either/both should start with the local gateway as the first response, and then you'll be able to see where the connection dies.
We waited until the end of the day and just shut down the Fortigate firewall box and that was the problem. We didn't want it to lock everybody out because nobody knows its password! :roflol:
No VPNs, I've rebooted switches and routers and it's not just WiFi; a couple of hardwired Windows machines also get no internet.
I've kicked it over to tech support with the ISP so we'll see. Thanks y'all...
from a command prompt netstat -r will return the routing table. Be sure there is a gateway in there. you can also do a tracert to an external address, I'd do both name and IP to see if you are getting dns resolution. Either/both should start with the local gateway as the first response, and then you'll be able to see where the connection dies.
There are several discrete networks flying around here and one of them has a little repeater booster thing but not on this network. Note that everyone involved has previously connected to the same network on their same devices without a problem.
Tell them to try disconnecting and reconnecting to the network. Turn off/on wifi.
There are several discrete networks flying around here and one of them has a little repeater booster thing but not on this network. Note that everyone involved has previously connected to the same network on their same devices without a problem.
Else ...any VPNs / individual DNS settings involved between you guys (you and them)?
Sounds like yer missing something. Is there a potential second modem/ router involved? Sometimes Wifi repeaters may be mistaken for routers or (cable-) modems from an outside look.
There are several discrete networks flying around here and one of them has a little repeater booster thing but not on this network. Note that everyone involved has previously connected to the same network on their same devices without a problem.