F I D O N E W S Volume 17, Number 41 11 Oct 2000 +----------------------------+---------------------------------------+ | The newsletter of the | ISSN 1198-4589 Published by: | | FidoNet community | "FidoNews" | | _ | 1-714-639-0377 1:1/23 | | / \ | | | /|oo \ | | | (_| /_) | | | _`@/_ \ _ | | | | | \ \\ | Editor: Warren Bonner | | | (*) | \ )) | editor@fidonews.org | | |__U__| / \// | | | _//|| _\ / | | | (_/(_|(____/ | | | (jm) | Newspapers should have no friends. | | | -- JOSEPH PULITZER | +----------------------------+---------------------------------------+ Table of Contents 1. EDITORIAL ................................................ 1 EDITORIAL ................................................ 1 2. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR .................................... 2 LETTERS TO EDITOR ........................................ 2 3. COLUMNS .................................................. 4 HUMOR .................................................... 4 OL'WDB's COLUMN .......................................... 4 Techie Tech .............................................. 5 4. NET HUMOR ................................................ 9 TODAY'S JOKE ............................................. 9 5. FIDONET BY INTERNET ...................................... 10 Fidonet Related Sites .................................... 10 6. FIDONEWS INFORMATION ..................................... 15 Masthead ................................................. 15 FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 1 9 Oct 2000 ================================================================= EDITORIAL ================================================================= editor@fidonews.org In Doug's last editorial, he was pretty specific in his description of the British monarchy with respect to the FidoNet structure. It was apparent to me that he was attempting to create an avenue for the development of a method to emancipate the "commoners", (read that sysops), from the battered deformed confines Policy 4.07. He went on to suggest a "constitutional monarchy with an elected House of Commons in charge". This general specification and base plan may have real merit. It could be the embryo for the future of FidoNet. Properly nourished by the many sharp minds in Fido, a healthy rebirth of Policy can be achieved to redefine Policy, and deliver a working platform. It must be a document as simple as the rungs of a ladder to read. One glance at any ladder tells the whole story. Anyone knows at once that it has a narrow specific way to get to the top of it. They also know that it will have to "fit" within the area of use. With that in mind, build a new document, rung by rung... step by step... to specify the "elected House of Commons" as Doug put it. The present officers being "grandfathered", (factored) in the plan. I personally like, "International_WWW.Fidonet" for a name. Let me hear what YOU think, please, that I may modify the ideas presented thus far. Bear in mind this is only a discussion of Policy 4.07. ----------------------------------------------------------------- FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 2 9 Oct 2000 ================================================================= LETTERS TO THE EDITOR ================================================================= NOTES that fell on the EDITOR'S DESK Editor@Fidonews.org ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ruth Argust has been very ill and just recovered enough to email me: Hi Warren, I have been in bed for about two weeks with a horrid case of the flu and not able to even get near the computer. I heard about Doug's death only a couple days ago and am still reeling from the shock. There are very few really NICE people in Fido who are nice all the time. Doug was incredible, always even tempered, always cordial, always ready with a one-liner. I adored him and his death has hit me harder than anyone will ever know. I realize that I am too late to assist you but at least one person out there (aside from Gerry) will know how deeply I am mourning the loss of this wonderful spirit. Ruth ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Carol Shenkenberger Sez: Z1_echomail echo now open for use. Please config your boards. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Gery Gilmore shouted: Personally I'd like to see ONE echo where a Moderator can at least request an echo be ADDED or REMOVED on all backbones. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Vlad Hrusca announced: R40.BAGOLA echo is a Jewish-orientated multi-language hebrew lessons. If you are interested you are welcome! Lehitraot, Vlad ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ President Lincoln Declaration President Abraham Lincoln declared Thanksgiving Day an Annual Holiday to be celebrated the last Thursday in November. The tradition begain in the fall of 1621 when William Bradford, governor of Plymouth, invited the neighboring village of Wanpanoag to join the pilgrams for a festival celebrating the bounty of the season. This is a gentle reminder that Thanksgiving is just around the corner. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A SMILE costs nothing, but it creates much. It enriches those who receive without impoverishing those who give. It happens in a flash, and the memory of it sometimes lasts forever. FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 3 9 Oct 2000 None are so rich that they can get along without it, and none are so poor but are richer for a smile. It creates happiness in the home, fosters goodwill in a business, and is the countersign of friends. It is rest to the weary, daylight to the discouraged, sunshine to the sad, and nature's best antidote for trouble. It cannot be bought, begged, borrowed or stolen, for it is something that is no earthly good to anybody till it is given away. And if it ever happens that some people should be too tired to give you a SMILE, why not leave one of yours? For nobody needs a SMILE so much as those who have none left to give. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ T-T-That's A-All Folks! ----------------------------------------------------------------- FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 4 9 Oct 2000 ================================================================= COLUMNS ================================================================= Roy Reed rcreed@juno.com The World's Thinnest Books STAYING HAPPILY MARRIED by Elizabeth Taylor BEAUTY SECRETS by Janet Reno HOME BUILT AIRPLANES by John Denver DOWN HILL SKIING by Sonny Bono ATLANTIC CROSSINGS OF THE TITANIC by White Star Lines HOW TO GET TO THE SUPER BOWL by Dan Marino THINGS I LOVE ABOUT BILL by Hillary Clinton MY LIFE'S MEMORIES by Ronald Reagan THINGS I CAN'T AFFORD by Bill Gates MY PLAN TO FIND THE REAL KILLERS by O.J. Simpson THINGS I WOULD NOT DO FOR MONEY by Dennis Rodman THE WILD YEARS by Al Gore ALL THE MEN I'VE LOVED BEFORE by Ellen DeGeneres AMELIA EARHART'S GUIDE TO THE PACIFIC OCEAN AMERICA'S MOST POPULAR LAWYERS DETROIT...A TRAVEL GUIDE DR. KEVORKIAN'S COLLECTION OF MOTIVATIONAL SPEECHES MIKE TYSON'S GUIDE TO DATING ETIQUETTE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----------------------------------------------------------------- wdbonner@pacbell.net The Van Gogh Family Tree His obnoxious brother.............Please Gogh FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 5 9 Oct 2000 His dizzy aunt........................Verti Gogh The brother who ate prunes...........Gotta Gogh The brother who worked at a convenience store......Stop'n Gogh The grandfather from Yugoslavia..........U Gogh The brother who bleached his clothes white......Hue Gogh The cousin from Illinois.............Chica Gogh His magician uncle.....................Wherediddy Gogh His Mexican friend....................Amee Gogh The Mexican friend's American half brother........Grin Gogh The nephew who drove a stagecoach.........Wellsfar Gogh The constipated uncle...............Can't Gogh The ballroom dancing aunt.............Tan Gogh The bird lover uncle................Flamin Gogh His nephew psychoanalyst...........E Gogh The fruit loving cousin................Man Gogh An aunt who taught positive thinking......Wayto Gogh The little bouncy nephew..............Poe Gogh A sister who loved disco...............Go Gogh His niece who travels the country in a van....Winnie Bay Gogh ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----------------------------------------------------------------- Carol Shenkenberg FAQSEC- Security for Sysops Dated: 6 OCT 2000 Hello all! Here is some general advice for setting up a more secure system. Much of it will be applicable to any BBS software so feel free to share the info about. To start with, my software is a _very_ secure system. It has no backdoors or known security flaws in the current release. What it does share with every other software, is the ability for the sysop to change the native settings in ways which may not be as safe as intended. 1. Lets start with the archive conversion feature. Unless you really need it, remove it. There are external programs such as THDPRO which will scan for viruses and convert archives at the same time. If you must keep it, you want to leave it set so only the SYSOP can convert archives on your system. Now that was easy eh? The rest will be just as easy to do. 2. Sysop access level. This is an area where you will be best off if devious. Do you use the computer always at home? If so, there is no need to allow non-local keyboard access with that account. If you set SYSOP access to local only keyboard, no one can gain that access unless sitting at your local keyboard. a. Devious trick, dont use the main sysop account for other than sysop functions. Make a second account in your real name, with handle if preferred, and set it basically at normal validated levels. FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 6 9 Oct 2000 b. Co-sysops and access levels. Now there are extremely reliable co-sysops and very good reasons for having them. I understand and most others do also, but the new sysop does need to be aware the co-sysop access can be a security problem. When possible, this is the secure way to go about it: 1. Dont have any unless you really NEED one. IE: Don't use it as a reward for being your 'best buddy'. 2. If they live with you, or where the computer is, set their access to require 'local keyboard only' and it will prevent anyone from dialing in as them and doing damage to your system. 3. Give them no more access than they *must* have to do their job. If they only remotely login to handle their messages, consider 2 accounts just like in the sysop example above. 3. Look to the WFC (waiting for caller) screen and note almost every sysop function is there in almost every software. If you really want to drive someone crazy, remove the sysop menu access from all other menus. If it just isnt there, it *cant* be used against you. 4. Passwords. Encryption. Use it. This protects both you and your callers in the unlikely event someone manages to get ahold of your user information files. a. Be aware of habits you may have developed as a sysop. I can't stress enough the need to protect your system passwords. Don't accidently use them on another BBS. While drafting this FAQ, one feedback from a beta site was about how he knows the system passwords on most of the systems in his net. How? Easy, the sysops forget and try it out of habit on his system, get an error, then use the one th chose for his BBS. On some softwares, this will leave your password sitting in the other BBS's log file! b. Don't use the same password in FD as you use on your BBS if you also use FD as your terminal program. If you do, one day you may find when logging into another BBS, it sends your system password as it trys to 'autoconnect'. (There are ways around this but beyond the scope of this file. See the FrontDoor documentation). 6. Keyboard remapping. This is when via file or othermanner, someone manages to change your keyboard to say something like 'del c: /u' when you press the F1 key (or whatever they chose to remap). Dont allow it. You have several choices of ANSI.SYS type replacement files which literally dont contain the keyboard remapping capabilities. For regular DOS users, ZANSI.SYS works FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 7 9 Oct 2000 well for most. It also takes up less memory than normal ANSI.SYS does. DVANSI isfor Desqview users and works just as well. Other common types are NNANSI and ANSI.COM. a. ZANSI is the magic name at 1:275/100 for the Zansi replacement file should you not find it locally. 7. Backups! Security is also making sure you can put your system back together after a hardware failure. Make them nightly if possible with a series of tapes or ZIP/JAZZ drive so that if one goes bad, you always have a slightly older one to go back to. If you have no tape backup, at the least backup your critical files such as the userlist information, to floppy. If you have no tape backup but have plenty of extra drivespace, a less than perfect but better than nothing method, it is backup to another directory. It is best if this is done to a separate drive. 8. Path statements. Define the Protocol path (DSZ/GSZ etc) and the Archive Conversion path (PKZIP etc) with a full description such as C:\protocol and C:\converts. Oh, and dont use those default names! Neither one need be listed in the Path= statement found in your AUTOEXEC.BAT. a. Should you find it awkward to not have your compression utilities on your DOS search path, there are several ways to deal with that. I happen to use a little batch file to reset my path statement to include my compression utility directory. I just have to remember to run the other batch file to set it back afterwards (or reboot). b. Many sysops just list the conversion archives in the path but leave out the protocol directory. c. Now and again you will encounter a door which requires one or the other be in your path. Best to look about for another simular product without that need. If you can't live without that door, be aware that it has slightly reduced your system security. 9. The most common method of breaching any BBS security is by taking advantage of flaws or oversights of third party programs (upload checkers, protocols etc). When installing third party utilities it's best to research the source to find out how secure the program is and what you can do to ensure it is set up securely. NEVER trust the author's claims. Instead, get independant reviews if possible and solicit opinions of other sysops. Often the best gauge of a utility's security is how widely used it is. But don't let this fool you (popular is not 'always' secure). a. When in doubt, ask the sysops in your area what they use and measures they take to ensure these utilities are secure. Most importantly ask more than one person since no one person knows all the quirks of third party utilities. b. This text does not endeavour to suggest that any particular FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 8 9 Oct 2000 utility is either secure or insecure. Claims of this nature which 'may' be accurate at this time could be in error and may not reflect future versions of the same programs. c. When passing information to a door or utility, never pass it more than it absolutely needs to function. 'More is not better' in this case. 10. Some folks, just like to upload trojan programs. A Trojan can best be defined as a program which does something other than what it looks like it's doing. A famous one, looked like a flight simulator, but actually reformatted the HD while playing. Trojans do not infect other programs, but are damaging just the same. To prevent the spread of them, mark your uploads to a secure directory and do not autovalidate programs until you have tested them out. This protects you, your callers, and the fellow sysops in your area if they are downloaded before discovery and uploaded to another system. 11. Doors, revisted. Don't assume because a caller sends you a program, and begs it be added, it's 'safe'. Test it first. Even if it looks like a common archive, obtaining the same one from a safe source for comparison is a good idea. Well all! This has been a collective effort of many. By this point, I have had inputs from many sites! Special Kudos to: Lars Hellsten, Don Johnson, David Muir, and Kevin Watkins. For inspiration, thank Scott Raymond of a long ago security package for earlier Telegard versions. Portions contain ideas from the June 1994 IceNET News article (Copywrite) by Ken Harris, WWIV Security: One Semi-Expert's View (with permission). Feedback may be given in the TG_SUPPORT echo, or netmailed to: 1:275/100. xxcarol aka Carol Shenkenberger DPC USN TG Beta Norfolk ----------------------------------------------------------------- FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 9 9 Oct 2000 ================================================================= NET HUMOR ================================================================= One man's hobby was fishing, he spent all his weekends near the river or lake, paying no attention to weather. One Sunday, early in the morning, he went to the river, as usual. It was cold and raining, so he decided to return back to his house. He came in, went to his bedroom, undressed and laid near his wife. "What terrible weather today honey," he said to her. "Yes. And my idiot husband went fishing!" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----------------------------------------------------------------- FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 10 9 Oct 2000 ================================================================= FIDONET BY INTERNET ================================================================= . -- -- -- -- --- -- -- -- -- - | FIDONET-RELATED SITES | ` -- -- -- -- --- -- -- -- -- - Last update: September 16, 2000 FidoNet Homepage: http://www.fidonet.org FidoNews: http://www.fidonews.org [HTML] ftp://ftp.nwstar.com/fidonet/fidonews/ ftp://ftp.sstar.com/fidonet/fnews/ Echolist: http://www.baltimoremd.com/echolist/ Echomail links: http://www.osirusoft.com/fidonet/fidoip.html SDS Files: http://fidobbs.dk/download (Web Access to SDS) FTSC page: http://www.ftsc.org/ General: http://www.writebynight.com/fidonet.html Zone 1: http://www.z1.fidonet.org Region 10: http://www.r10.org http://www.psnw.com/~net205/region10.html Net 103: http://www.webworldinc.com/club103/ Net 203: http://www.geocities.com/Area51/8687/net203index.html Region 11: http://oeonline.com/~garyg/region11/ Net 2410: http://www.earforce.dyndns.org/net2410/ Region 12: http://sparkys.dyndns.org Region 13: http://www.net264.org/r13.htm Net 264: http://www.net264.org/ Net 275: http://www.homershut.net/~mahoover/net275/ Region 14: http://www.ouijabrd.com/region14 Net 282: http://www.rxn.com/~net282/ Region 15: Region 16: Region 17: http://www.nwstar.com/~region17/ Net 140: http://www.nwstar.com/~net140 Region 18: http://techshop.pdn.net/fido/ Region 19: http://bise.tzo.com/r19 Net 124: http://www.startext.net/np/net124 http://texoma.net/~flv Net 130: http://www.startext.net/homes/net130 Net 393: http://www.chatter.com/~wb/ Zone 2: http://www.z2.fidonet.org ftp://ftp.sstar.com/fidonet/zone2 (Z2 nodelists etc.) Region 20: http://www.fidonet.pp.se (in Swedish) Region 23: http://www.fido.dk (in Danish) Region 24: http://www.swb.de/personal/flop/gatebau.html (German) http://www.was-ist-fido.de/ Fido-IP: http://home.nrh.de/fido/ (English/German) Region 25: http://www.literary.freeserve.co.uk/net2502/ FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 11 9 Oct 2000 Region 26: http://www.nemesis.ie REC 26: http://www.nrgsys.com/orb Region 27: http://telematique.org/ft/r27.htm Region 29: http://www.rtfm.be/fidonet/ (French) http://Welcome.to/skynetbbs/ Region 30: http://www.fidonet.ch (German) ? Region 33: http://www.fidoitalia.net (Italian) Region 34: http://www.pobox.com/cnb/r34.htm (Spanish) REC34: http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/4552/ Region 36: http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/7207/ Region 38: http://public.st.carnet.hr/~blagi/bbs/adriam.html Region 41: http://www.fidonet.gr (Greek/English) Region 42: http://www.fido.cz ! Net422: http://www.fido.sk (Slovak/English) Region 50: http://www.fido7.com/ (Russian) Net 5010: http://fido.tu-chel.ac.ru/ (Russian) Net 5015: http://www.fido.nnov.ru/ (Russian) Net 5028: http://5028.yaroslavl.ru/ Net 5030: http://kenga.ru/fido/ (Russian & English) Net 5049: http://www.n5049.z2.fidonet.org (English/Russian) Net 5074: http://www.z2.n5074.fidonet.net ?? Net 5085: http://www.fidonet.uz/ (Russian) Zone 3: http://www.z3.fidonet.org Zone 4: Region 80: http://fidobrasil.8m.com (Portuguese) Region 90: Net 904: http://members.tripod.com/~net904 (Spanish) Zone 5: http://www.eastcape.co.za/fidonet/ Zone 6: http://www.z6.fidonet.org Region 65: http://www.cfido.com/fidonet/cfidochina.html (Chinese) Fidonet Via Internet Hubs See also: http://www.osirusoft.com/fidoip.html a @ preceding an individual's name implies a virtual email address. The email is translated as follows firstlast@osirusoft.com will automatically route to the appropriate individual's email. Anyone in this list will also receive routed notice of this feature. In my case, it would still be joejared@osirusoft.com, but you get the idea. Also, as information is provided to me, I will be adding a latency field to each node, which is defined as the maximum time between when the message is received, and when it is sent on to other nodes, or available to be sent onward, defined in minutes. A latency of ! implies that there is an immediate response, and an attempt to deliver immediately after processing, or a "MinuteMail System", as it were. FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 12 9 Oct 2000 v-email flag firstnamelastname@osirusoft.com | email address or Node# | Operator | Facilities (*) | Speed,| Basic Rate | | |latency| -----------+-------------------+----------------+-------+------------ Zone 1 | | | | 10/3 | Brenda Donovan | FTP,UUE,BinkP | 384K,30| n/c 10/345 @ Todd Cochrane | FTP,BinkP,VMOT | T1,! | n/c 12/12 @ Ken Wilson | FTP | T1 | $24mo. 13/25 @ Jim Balcom | FTP | 56k | $20mo. 103/5 @ Mark Luetger | BinkP | 384k,!| n/c 103/153 @ Michael Box | BinkP | aDSL,!| n/c 103/301 @ Joe Jared | BinkP,FTP,NFS | 384k,!| n/c 103/401 @ Warren Bonner | BinkP | aDSL,!| n/c 105/8 | Russ Johnson | FTP,BinkP,VMoT | 384k | n/c 105/72 @ Larry James | FTP, BinkP | aDSL | $50/yr 106/1 @ Steve Loupe | BinkP, FTP | 128k | ??? 106/6018 | Lawrence Garvin | FTP, VMoT | aDSL,60| n/c 107/453 @ Jeffrey Estevez| FTP,BinkP,VMoT,UUE| 56k,60| $10 mo. 140/1 @ Bob Seaborn | FTP,BinkP | T3,30 | $5/$16 167/133 | Stephen Monteith | BinkP | 128k+ | n/c 211/417 @ Korombos | BinkP,UUE,FTP | T1 | n/c 218/109 @ Matt Munson | BinkP,UUE | 33.6k | n/c 244/2 | Kari Suomela | FTP,VMoT,BinkP,UUE| T1,! | $25.00/mo 246/160 @ Mason Vye | FTP, UUE | 56K | n/c 280/169 | Brian Greenstreet | FTP | 33.6 | $2mo. 342/3 @ Richard Dodsworth | BinkP,FTP | 128K+ | n/c 395/670 | Arthur Stark | BinkD,FTP | 128k | n/c 379/1 @ Dale Ross | FTP, BinkP,UUE | 256K+,! n/c 396/1 @ John Souvestre | FTP,VMoT | T1,10 | $5/mo 396/45 | Marc Lewis | UUE | 33.6 | $26/yr 2604/104 @ Jim Mclaughlin | FTP,VMoT,UUE | 33.6 | $1mo 2613/404 @ David Moufarrege | BinkP,FTP,VMoT | 128k+,!| n/c 2624/306 | David Calafrancesco | VMoT | 33.6 | n/c 3613/2 @ jyates@bsdi.ldl.net | UUE | 28.8 | n/c 3632/84 | Robert Todd |FTP,VMoT,UUE,BinkP | 57.6k | n/c 3639/93 @ Ross Cassell | FTP, BinkP |128K+,!| n/c 3651/9 @ Jerry Gause | FTP,VMoT | 33.6 | $3/$6 -------------------------------------------------------------- Zone 2 | 20/11 | Henrik Lindhe | BinkP | ??? | n/c 31/1 | Gabriel Plutzar | BinkP | T1+ | n/c 203/600 | Mikael Karlsson | UUE | 64k | n/c 221/360 @ Tommi Koivula | BinkP,UUE | ??? | n/c 236/205 @ Michael Kaaber | BinkP | ??? | n/c 246/2098 | Volker Imre | BinkP | ??? | n/c 280/1601 @ Jeroen VanDeLeur | FTP,UUE | 64k | n/c 292/620 | Eddy Missoul | VMoT, UUE | 64k |N/C 292/624 | Steven Leeman | UUE | 64k | N/C 292/2003 | Eric Vaneberck | BinkP | 768k | n/c 301/1 | Peter Witschi | BinkP | 768k | n/c 332/807 | Roberto Mascolo | BinkP | ??? | n/c 335/535 @ Mario Mure | BinkP,VMot,UUE | 64k | n/c 335/610 | Gino Lucrezi | UUE | 33.6 | n/c 344/201 | Julio Garcia | BinkP | ??? | n/c 346/3 @ Carlos Navarro | UUE | ??? | n/c FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 13 9 Oct 2000 382/100 | Sinisa Burina | BinkP | ??? | n/c 406/555 | Ofir Michaeli & | BinkP | ??? | n/c 406/555 | Marius Kaizerman | BinkP | ??? | n/c 423/81 | Milos Bajer | BinkP | ??? | n/c 464/4077 | Serguei Trouchelle| UUE | 19.2 | n/c 465/204 | Va Milushnikov | BinkP | 33.6k | n/c 469/84 | Max Masyutin | VMoT | 256k | n/c 480/112 | Adam Sarapata| FTP, VMoT, UUE,BinkP| 128k | n/c 2411/413 @ Dennis Dittrich | UUE,BinkP | 64k | n/c 2446/301 @ Lothar Behet | BinkP,VMoT,UUE,FTP | 64K | n/c 2474/275 | Christian Emig | UUE | 64k | unkn 5030/115 | Andrey Podkolzin | BinkP | ??? | n/c 5100/8 | Egons Bush | BinkP | ??? | n/c 5020/1159 | Gennady Kudryashoff | UUE | 33.6 | n/c -------------------------------------------------------------- Zone 3 633/260 @ Malcolm Miles | FTP,BinkP | 64K | n/c 640/954 | Rick Van Ruth | FTP,VMot,UUE,BinkP| 56K| n/c 774/605 @ Barry Blackford|BinkP,VMoT:10023,ifcico,FTP |33.6| n/c -------------------------------------------------------------- Zone 4 905/100 | Fabian Gervan | VMoT,UUE,BinkP | 128k | n/c 902/18 | Javier Tejedor | UUE | 33,6 | n/c -- * FTP = Internet File Transfer Protocol * VMoT = Virtual Mailer over Telnet (various) * UUE = uuencode<->email type transfers * BinkP = front end mailer for TCPIP networks * NFS = Linux Networking ---------------------------------------------- Fidonet oriented news servers news.osirusoft.com news.tardis.net Fidonet oriented chat rooms. room #fidonet 5PM (PDT 11AM GMT) Sundays irc.osirusoft.com (Peers wanted) ---------------------------------------------- Please send updates, corrections and suggestions to Joe Jared, 1:103/301, joejared@osirusoft.com. All email addresses here for purpose of corresponding with fidonet members about obtaining a feed. Improper use of the virtual email addresses, and most especially, email addressed to blockme@relays.osirusoft.com will be considered a request to be blocked by my open relay spam stopper at http://relays.osirusoft.com ----------------------------------------------------------------- FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 14 9 Oct 2000 ----------------------------------------------------------------- FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 15 9 Oct 2000 ================================================================= FIDONEWS INFORMATION ================================================================= + -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- FIDONEWS STAFF - -- -- -- -- -- -- -- + | | | Editor: Warren D. Bonner, 1:1/23, editor@fidonews.org | | Webmaster: Jim Barchuk, jb@fidonews.org | | Columnist: Joe Jared, 1:103/0, joejared@osirusoft.com | | (Fido Via Internet Hubs column) | | Columnist: Ol' WDB, 1:103/401, wdbonner@pacbell.net | | Humor: Roy Reed, rcreed@juno.com | | Features: Frank Vest, 1:124/6308.1 | | | + -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- + + -- -- -- -- -- -- -- - EDITORS EMERITI - -- -- -- -- -- -- -- + | | | Tom Jennings, Thom Henderson, Dale Lovell, Vince | | Perriello, Tim Pozar, Sylvia Maxwell, Donald Tees, | | Christopher Baker, Zorch Frezberg, Henk Wolsink, | | Doug Meyers* | | | + -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- + * deceased "Fido", "FidoNet" and the dog-with-diskette are U.S. registered trademarks of Tom Jennings, P.O. Box 410923, San Francisco, CA 94141, and are used with permission. Fidonews is published weekly by and for the members of Fidonet. Fidonews is Copyright (C) 2000 by Warren Bonner, though authors retain rights to their contributed articles. Opinion expressed by the authors is strictly their own. Noncommercial duplication and distribution within Fidonet is encouraged. Authors are encouraged to send their articles in ASCII text to Douglas Myers at one of his addresses above. The weekly edition of Fidonews is distributed through the file area FIDONEWS, and is published as echomail in the echo FIDONEWS. These sources are normally available through your Network Coordinator. The current and past issues are also available from the following sources: + -- -- -- -- -- -- - FIDONEWS AVAILABILITY - -- -- -- -- -- -- + | | | Freq FIDONEWS @ 1:140/1, or 1:396/1 | | ftp://ftp.sstar.com/fidonet/fnews/ | | ftp://ftp.nwstar.com/fidonet/fidonews/ | | http://www.fidonews.org | | email subscription: majordomo@fidonews.org | | (subject: help body: list) | | ftp mail: ftpmail@fidonews.org (subject: help) | | | FIDONEWS 17-41 Page 16 9 Oct 2000 + -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- + -----------------------------------------------------------------