[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Reply to: [list | sender only]
Re: VPN
- To: Multiple recipients of list <epc-l@iucr.org>
- Subject: Re: VPN
- From: Lachlan Cranswick <l.m.d.cranswick@dl.ac.uk>
- Date: Thu, 4 Jul 2002 13:26:09 +0100 (BST)
> Thats not what I had in mind. > > Its rather the many academic institutions who have a subscription to >the IUCr journals. Access to the journals is limited to subnets. In >other words you have to be on site to get access. VPN gets around this >by allowing access into the local net from outside hence permitting >access to the journals from outside the sub net. i.e. You don't have to >be on site, you don't have to be employed any more by the institution, >visitors could manage to keep access for years on end, etc. That what I >had in mind. Re the IUCr Journals Are VPM meant to be a problem to the IUCr or a feature ? In theory, the person normally has to be an employee or of special status to that local institution to get a VPM. As a possible irrelevance - you don't need an extra VPM to do the above: If you have an account on a remote network machine - you can just secure shell to this and use Lynx or another ASCII web browser to browse the web - giving you access to most facilities supported by using IP authentication. ---------- In theory, I could secure shell to Columbia University (I still have an account) - then browse the IUCr journals from there via Lynx. However, not much point on doing this as Birkbeck have a subscription to the IUCr journals. I think most people would be in this situation - if they had a need for the journals - they would normally be at an institution that had a subscription? Plus if they didn't and were doing the above - my hunch is it would be an incentive for them to argue for full local institutional access - given (based on experience) doing this type of tunnelling can be very slow, problematic and highly frustrating. I have been in this situation after moving from Columbia University to Birkbeck with some other databases. It is a real pain doing what you infer/imply as most web databases need graphical webbrowsers to function. Speed issues makes it very impractical to do this. e.g., From London, open a session with New York - then tunnel a graphical Netscape sessions. Lachlan. PS: If you were really worried about this, I would suggest that having a journals website that would only work with graphical (non-ascii browsers) would significantly kill the problem - given people can already use telnet/ssh and an ASCII web browser to do this type of thing. PPS: Another suggestion is to request subscribing insitutions to please confirm they are not giving external people remote access to this via remote computer accounts. It is very easy for computing facilities to stop certain types of activities from remote users. Most institutions I have been at try to be legal about this things. ----------------------- Lachlan M. D. Cranswick Collaborative Computational Project No 14 (CCP14) for Single Crystal and Powder Diffraction Birkbeck University of London and Daresbury Laboratory Postal Address: CCP14 - School of Crystallography, Birkbeck College, Malet Street, Bloomsbury, WC1E 7HX, London, UK Tel: (+44) 020 7631 6850 Fax: (+44) 020 7631 6803 E-mail: l.m.d.cranswick@dl.ac.uk Room: B091 WWW: http://www.ccp14.ac.uk/
Reply to: [list | sender only]