GTP
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Is SMB 1.0/CIFS safe to enable for a basic home network?
Thanks
Thanks
Is SMB 1.0/CIFS safe to enable for a basic home network?
Thanks
Thanks, just confirming what I already know.Yes if none of the machines will be attached to the Internet. Ever.
Why do they want to use it? Old Printer?Thanks, just confirming what I already know.
Have a client that wants to use it and I'm trying to convince her otherwise.
That's why those old Corolla's held together so long......Its an old Toyota knitting machine.
Ok so why are you trying to get her to stop using SMBv1? That machine is too expensive to replace. Take the machine that runs it off the internet and put it on a separate VLAN.Its an old Toyota knitting machine.
I'd actually be far more concerned about having verified full disk images and replacement hardware for hardware/software failures rather than an SMB1 exploit. It's almost certain that kit will only run on 32 bit, possibly even 16. And that hardware will only keep getting harder to source as time goes by.Ok so why are you trying to get her to stop using SMBv1? That machine is too expensive to replace. Take the machine that runs it off the internet and put it on a separate VLAN.
I would see if you can hypervisor it.I'd actually be far more concerned about having verified full disk images and replacement hardware for hardware/software failures rather than an SMB1 exploit. It's almost certain that kit will only run on 32 bit, possibly even 16. And that hardware will only keep getting harder to source as time goes by.
Been there got the tee shirt.The catch with hypervisors is a lot of that older stuff used hardware based license keys. Initially using parallel ports, serial and even dedicated PCI/ISA cards. When they moved to USB sticks it's easy because you can choose to expose a USB device directly to the VM.
This is what I have done. There is no reason for it to be on the internet now.Ok so why are you trying to get her to stop using SMBv1? That machine is too expensive to replace. Take the machine that runs it off the internet and put it on a separate VLAN.