Re: Change NT-passwords via web

From: Consultant® (consultant_mcngp@yahoo.com)
Date: 08/20/02


From: "Consultant®" <consultant_mcngp@yahoo.com>
Date: Tue, 20 Aug 2002 10:41:23 -0700


yes, the htr files work quite well

"Daniel" <dsevera@severa.ch> wrote in message
news:4da901c24866$1abf1670$3aef2ecf@TKMSFTNGXA09...
> Is it possible to let users change their local NT
> passwords via the web (HTTPS).
>
> I have a Web Server running IIS 4.0 on Windows NT 4.0. The
> site is password protected and therefore users have to
> login through Basic Authentication. The usernames/pwds are
> taken from the local NT-accounts.
>
> Does anybody know whether the IISADMPWD virtual directory
> works under NT 4.0. Or are there any other tools available
> to change NT passwords via web, that work unter NT 4.0 and
> which need a minimal effort for installation and
> configuration?



Relevant Pages

  • Re: SP2 and OWA
    ... risk, not that exposing passwords was a risk. ... interested in knowing how HTTP is more of a risk than HTTPS and I ...
    (microsoft.public.exchange.admin)
  • Re: secure login form
    ... while I'm developing sites for some time I never coded a login form with security in mind. ... For my point of view I'm thinking of using md5 passwords in db. ... That is where https comes in. ... if you use cookie-based sessions, you can mark your cookies as secure. ...
    (comp.lang.php)
  • Re: secure login form
    ... For my point of view I'm thinking of using md5 passwords in db. ... If you want the avoid the man-in-the-middle eavesdropping on you: Then you need https, ... If you are afraid the username/password you store in your database is hacked somehow, then it can make sense to store them with an md5 hash, which is one-way encryption indeed. ... (You can propagate the sessionid from http to https via a form, and let the receiving script use that sessionid for its https session. ...
    (comp.lang.php)
  • Re: secure login form
    ... For my point of view I'm thinking of using md5 passwords in db. ... If you want the avoid the man-in-the-middle eavesdropping on you: Then you need https, ... If you are afraid the username/password you store in your database is hacked somehow, then it can make sense to store them with an md5 hash, which is one-way encryption indeed. ... (You can propagate the sessionid from http to https via a form, and let the receiving script use that sessionid for its https session. ...
    (comp.lang.php)
  • Re: Urgent question - please!
    ... passwords then possibly. ... normal channels and when there verify the address bar information [for instance Ebay ... would also show https in the address bar instead of http. ...
    (microsoft.public.win2000.security)

Quantcast