On Wed, 28 Sep 2005 08:47:00 GMT, Morgan Ohlson
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>On Tue, 27 Sep 2005 20:01:36 GMT, David H. Lipman wrote:
>
>> From: "Morgan Ohlson" <(E-Mail Removed)>
>>
>>|
>>| My www connection is IC.
>>|
>>| Can anyone reach my ports... or is there some connection needed trough a
>>| site and beyond the browser?
>>|
>>| Morgan O.
>>
>>
>> What is IC ?
>
>My question is more of how others can reach my ports? I have no server
>applications.
>
>Can anyone reach the ports only by knowing my IP, or is there ather things
>that set limits for it?
Your IP number doesn't have to be known. Internet worms and hackers
scan blocks of numbers looking for potential targets. A unprotected PC
usually takes hits in just a matter of minutes nowdays.
A default Windows install will have internet services running that
result in open ports. Windows XP has a firewall that blocks incoming
attempts. But the firewall is only active by default with Service Pack
2. Otherwise you have to enable it yourself:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/283673
It's possible to disable all Windows internet services and close all
ports. But many users have more than one PC, and they set up a
Local Area Network (LAN) for file and printer sharing. The associated
ports for this are open by default on Windows. Users protect
such arrangements usually by means of a firewall .... often by a
external router/firewall.
Art
http://home.epix.net/~artnpeg