Secure Enterprise Wi-Fi configuration - https://enterprise-wifi.net
Hello, since people are discussing onboarding tools such as eduroam CAT on this list recently, this is a good moment to announce that such an onboarding tool is *freely available* for *every* deployer of Entprise WiFi / IEEE 802.1X. We have re-launched the tool formerly known under https://802.1x-config.org on the domain https://enterprise-wifi.net with a major new version from upstream (CAT 2.0) and with a new business model: Every feature we have online is entirely free to use now! I.e. Freemium has gone away. We've replaced this with a PayPal donate button in case you want to help us in continued operation of the service. We still don't support Android yet (even if the web service codebase can) because we will need a dedicated App in Google Play for that, and that takes time and resources. A donation would help speeding this up, but no pressure :-) Greetings, Stefan Winter
On Thu, Apr 4, 2019 at 6:57 AM 1x-config Information <info@1x-config.org> wrote:
Hello,
since people are discussing onboarding tools such as eduroam CAT on this list recently, this is a good moment to announce that such an onboarding tool is *freely available* for *every* deployer of Entprise WiFi / IEEE 802.1X.
We have re-launched the tool formerly known under https://802.1x-config.org on the domain
Hi, I looked briefly at the pages but didn't find a license that the software is released under. What is the license of the tool/software? Thanks, -m
On Apr 4, 2019, at 9:17 AM, Matt Zagrabelny <mzagrabe@d.umn.edu> wrote:
I looked briefly at the pages but didn't find a license that the software is released under.
What is the license of the tool/software?
The tool is a web site. So you're not downloading that. What you download is usually a configuration file. e.g. for iOS / OSX, an XML "mobileconfig" file. There are no license issues with a configuration file. Alan DeKok.
On Thu, Apr 4, 2019 at 8:29 AM Alan DeKok <aland@deployingradius.com> wrote:
On Apr 4, 2019, at 9:17 AM, Matt Zagrabelny <mzagrabe@d.umn.edu> wrote:
I looked briefly at the pages but didn't find a license that the software is released under.
What is the license of the tool/software?
The tool is a web site. So you're not downloading that.
What you download is usually a configuration file. e.g. for iOS / OSX, an XML "mobileconfig" file. There are no license issues with a configuration file.
Got it. Thanks! -m
I've scanned some of the executables created by this site and 3 out of 10 virus scanners found something so I'm wary of this. Do they have any security certifications? On Thu, Apr 4, 2019 at 9:37 AM Matt Zagrabelny <mzagrabe@d.umn.edu> wrote:
On Thu, Apr 4, 2019 at 8:29 AM Alan DeKok <aland@deployingradius.com> wrote:
On Apr 4, 2019, at 9:17 AM, Matt Zagrabelny <mzagrabe@d.umn.edu> wrote:
I looked briefly at the pages but didn't find a license that the software is released under.
What is the license of the tool/software?
The tool is a web site. So you're not downloading that.
What you download is usually a configuration file. e.g. for iOS / OSX, an XML "mobileconfig" file. There are no license issues with a configuration file.
Got it. Thanks!
-m - List info/subscribe/unsubscribe? See http://www.freeradius.org/list/users.html
Hello, > I've scanned some of the executables created by this site and 3 out of 10 > virus scanners found something so I'm wary of this. Do they have any > security certifications? You should try VirusTotal. A file I just downloaded has 8 out of 70 engines thinking there's something special. *All* of which classify it only because of heuristics. "Suspicious" "heuristic" "generic" "80% confidence" etc are the terms used. Our installers change delicate system settings, including writing into the registry, in a reg key dealing with passwords. But that's because we set Wi-Fi passwords, and that is where Windows stores them. It sometimes happens that virus scanners see this behaviour and freak out. It is indeed a pity, but nothing we can do much about. Not doing these system modifications means not doing our job. Maybe it helps you to see that the overwhelming majority of detection engines, including almost all the major ones shows a green checkmark: https://www.virustotal.com/#/file/61b8e0b9529182fe353bc67339dc031f68b43111f7cd9368d7f954cdad2ce1e8/detection As a further datapoint, the upstream code we use for installer generation (eduroam CAT) signs executables with an EV code signing certificate, while we don't, and for good reasons. That makes upstream's virus scanner reports a little more green than ours. If none of the above explanations help you, and you are still wary, the only remaining advice I can then give you is: don't use the installers. Nobody's forcing you to. Greetings, Stefan Winter > > On Thu, Apr 4, 2019 at 9:37 AM Matt Zagrabelny <mzagrabe@d.umn.edu> wrote: > >> On Thu, Apr 4, 2019 at 8:29 AM Alan DeKok <aland@deployingradius.com> >> wrote: >> >>> On Apr 4, 2019, at 9:17 AM, Matt Zagrabelny <mzagrabe@d.umn.edu> wrote: >>>> I looked briefly at the pages but didn't find a license that the >> software >>>> is released under. >>>> >>>> What is the license of the tool/software? >>> >>> The tool is a web site. So you're not downloading that. >>> >>> What you download is usually a configuration file. e.g. for iOS / OSX, >>> an XML "mobileconfig" file. There are no license issues with a >>> configuration file. >>> >> >> Got it. Thanks! >> >> -m >> - >> List info/subscribe/unsubscribe? See >> http://www.freeradius.org/list/users.html > - > List info/subscribe/unsubscribe? See http://www.freeradius.org/list/users.html >
participants (4)
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1x-config Information -
Alan DeKok -
Matt Zagrabelny -
Nate .