So? How is this specifically relevant to the topic at hand?
If you have someone malicious in your internal network that can connect to your Erlang nodes, you have bigger issues that them connecting to your Erlang nodes.
I don't see the point of your original comment. Having an out-of-the-box RPC mechanism means you gotta secure it as you secure any other internal service. That's sysadmin 101.
> I don't see the point of your original comment. Having an out-of-the-box RPC mechanism means you gotta secure it as you secure any other internal service. That's sysadmin 101
Most RPC systems can't inject code into the running system dynamically. That's the point of my original post.
If you have someone malicious in your internal network that can connect to your Erlang nodes, you have bigger issues that them connecting to your Erlang nodes.
I don't see the point of your original comment. Having an out-of-the-box RPC mechanism means you gotta secure it as you secure any other internal service. That's sysadmin 101.