Message-ID: <email address hidden>
Date: Thu, 04 Nov 2004 13:45:32 GMT
From: ROBERTOJIMENOCA <email address hidden>
To: <email address hidden>
Subject: Bug#237535: it seems it's not fixed
The bug seems to not be fixed because I just installed Debian unstable
selected to not open the holes and their are open.
Why does Debian even ship an inetd by default?
Why does Debian include that unuseful code in inetd?
Why the average user would want to have those holes open?
Message-ID: <email address hidden>
Date: Thu, 04 Nov 2004 13:45:32 GMT
From: ROBERTOJIMENOCA <email address hidden>
To: <email address hidden>
Subject: Bug#237535: it seems it's not fixed
The bug seems to not be fixed because I just installed Debian unstable
selected to not open the holes and their are open.
Why does Debian even ship an inetd by default?
Why does Debian include that unuseful code in inetd?
Why the average user would want to have those holes open?