Sounds a bit like you're selling Cisco. OpenVPN works everywhere and is faster and much easier to set up. Managing and configuring ASAs is a nightmare.
Excellent!!!
Hey, can you please tell me if there is a piece of vpnssl hardware that I can buy that will not require me to subscribe to a monthly service? This is for safe internet browsing, not for corporate connectivity.Thanks.
Excellent
Awesome video, thanks Ryan. Also…I just gave this video a thumbs up and it was thumbs up number 443…get it?
Excellent stuff.
Thank you so much
Very informative…
Not only do you know your stuff; you are very good at transferring knowledge; great video. I learned a lot from your videos.
Great!!!!!!!!!!!!!
that's a quiet class
Outstanding discussion. Learned a lot. Thank you
Thanks a lot for such a session.. very useful indeed
i thought port 443 was https?
You rock mate…. simply the best.
+Ryan Lindfield Hello Ryan, thanks for your efforts, I think this video is continuation of another video. So, can you please provide a link for that video (if at all there is any). Thanks
its pretty informative….?
Great explanation, I'm no security expert, just a CCIE R&S, but understood 95% of it! Better than reading thru tons of technical boring articles online!
Beautiful beautiful video!!!! This is what I call real treasure. Pure knowledge.
Thank you Sir!! Please keep on posting.
why it is not possible to configure site to site vpn using ssl ?
hello ryan i have a good question please help me to figure out. in a sesión SSL is a fact that you have a public key within the digital certificate that the server send you. and the server has the private Key. is a fact that you (the user) encrypt with the public key and the only one who can DesEncrypt is the server. my doubt is somebody inside my swicht with wireshark capture a Packet from the server to the user (first) and me (the second user) with the public key that i got because is a public key can DesEncrypt that Packet ?? and see the data that the server is sending to the First User ??
Why can't cisco impliment site to site via ssl? Or can the ASA's implimenting site to site handle both IPSec as well as SSL?
Thanks Rhyan for awesome knowledge transfer, do you have more videos on either security or RS/DC ?
Excellent! Extremely helpful overview.
This was very helpful. I have been unsure about IPsec vs SSL security differences. I have setup a IPsec vpn connection for my office. As I read about the two, it seems SSL is more popular. It makes more sense now that it was broken down into the OSI layers and all. I think I'll stay with my IPsec vpn connections now.
Awesome! Very informative and to the point!
Thank you very much for this video, always helps me revise for situations on demand.
GURU … GOD BLESS "_)
Learn to spell, dude.
Your videos are A+ quality.
Nice video
Very good explanation.. keep it up
This is amazing.
Beautifully explained.
Crystal clear. Thank you sir.
Thank you Sr.
Thanks for the video, I was able to use it for my vpn rented from datasoft
http://datasoft.ws.…..
Great video
Awesome video
A very beneficial video Must thank you for your knowledge sharing
Needed a quick refresher, very well explained, thanks Ryan!
perfect explaination!! many thanks
Great video!!! You can also use OpenVPN to set up your own free VPN SSL. Here is a great tutorial that I found and helped me a lot: http://soclevelone.com/index.php/2018/02/10/vpn-ssl-openvpn-server/
Sounds a bit like you're selling Cisco. OpenVPN works everywhere and is faster and much easier to set up. Managing and configuring ASAs is a nightmare.
Excellent!!!
Hey, can you please tell me if there is a piece of vpnssl hardware that I can buy that will not require me to subscribe to a monthly service? This is for safe internet browsing, not for corporate connectivity.Thanks.
Excellent
Awesome video, thanks Ryan. Also…I just gave this video a thumbs up and it was thumbs up number 443…get it?
Excellent stuff.
Thank you so much
Very informative…
Not only do you know your stuff; you are very good at transferring knowledge; great video. I learned a lot from your videos.
Great!!!!!!!!!!!!!
that's a quiet class
Outstanding discussion. Learned a lot. Thank you
Thanks a lot for such a session.. very useful indeed
i thought port 443 was https?
You rock mate…. simply the best.
+Ryan Lindfield
Hello Ryan, thanks for your efforts, I think this video is continuation of another video. So, can you please provide a link for that video (if at all there is any). Thanks
its pretty informative….?
Great explanation, I'm no security expert, just a CCIE R&S, but understood 95% of it! Better than reading thru tons of technical boring articles online!
Beautiful beautiful video!!!!
This is what I call real treasure. Pure knowledge.
Thank you Sir!!
Please keep on posting.
why it is not possible to configure site to site vpn using ssl ?
hello ryan i have a good question please help me to figure out. in a sesión SSL is a fact that you have a public key within the digital certificate that the server send you. and the server has the private Key. is a fact that you (the user) encrypt with the public key and the only one who can DesEncrypt is the server. my doubt is somebody inside my swicht with wireshark capture a Packet from the server to the user (first) and me (the second user) with the public key that i got because is a public key can DesEncrypt that Packet ?? and see the data that the server is sending to the First User ??
Why can't cisco impliment site to site via ssl? Or can the ASA's implimenting site to site handle both IPSec as well as SSL?
Thanks Rhyan for awesome knowledge transfer, do you have more videos on either security or RS/DC ?
Excellent! Extremely helpful overview.
This was very helpful. I have been unsure about IPsec vs SSL security differences. I have setup a IPsec vpn connection for my office. As I read about the two, it seems SSL is more popular. It makes more sense now that it was broken down into the OSI layers and all. I think I'll stay with my IPsec vpn connections now.
This is a great video! Thank you.
wow, thank you so much!