Quote from Whamo:
Hey canyonman00,
Would a standard Linksys router running NAT and Zone Alarm on the PC be sufficient for Cable Modem connectivity?

Quote from Winston:
I was informed by my broker I trade w/that the bandwith is the issue for not using cable. Info may be lost in transmission and if many of your neighbors are logged on while your trading that's when you lose the bandwith. I use lowest speed DSL and is almost instantaneous. Have had several down times here in Boston though.
Quote from canyonman00:
... Now, are they sitting there sniffing your data? I seriously doubt it. But it is possible. Don't go overboard with fear here...


I'm not as worried about terrorists as I am about trojans sending sensitive information out, crackers sniffing around, or scriptkiddies with packetsniffers capturing passwords and acct. numbers.Quote from Lobster:
What are your worried about Re security? Terrorists hacking into your computer and disrupting the trading process? Unauthorized people getting access to files on your computer?
Yeah, that's one of the things I'm talking about. I've heard that your local neighborhood is basically a little network and one of the neighborhood kids can more easily hack your machine and/or sniff the data since they are internal to the network.Quote from Whamo:
From what I understand, DSL is switched (its own little LAN) from the CO to your house while Cable is part of a shared LAN with other users. With Cable, your neighbor could hook up a Network General Sniffer and see the traffic that's destined for your computer. That's were the security is different between the two.
Thanks for the tips, nitro.Quote from nitro:
5) Install a hardware firewall.
nitro
I'll call the cable provider next week and ask what they use.Quote from nitro:
"To solve this problem, some ISP's encrypt all cable modem trafiic, while others use a strictly router based conection with no LAN-type connection to nearby users.
Find out what security measures your ISP employes.
nitro
Good article. If anyone else wants to read it: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,4149,844016,00.aspQuote from nitro:
I strongly recommend the Feb 25 '03 PCMagazine article "Broadband's Back End" on page 61. It is the best description for the layman of all the technology that makes cable and dsl work.