Information
A pre-authentication banner is displayed when a terminal connects, before a login occurs. This banner is useful for sending messages that affect all users (such as impending system shutdowns). This banner can also be used to notify unauthorized users of any penalties to accessing the device, or any logging that may be configured.
Network banners are electronic messages that provide notice of legal rights to users of computer networks. From a legal standpoint, banners have following primary functions.
- Banners may be used to generate consent to real-time monitoring under
ECPA
Title III.
- Banners may be used to generate consent to the retrieval of stored files and records pursuant to
ECPA
.
- in the case of government networks, banners may eliminate any Fourth Amendment "reasonable expectation of privacy" that government employees or other users might otherwise retain in their use of the government's network under O'Connor v. Ortega, 480 U.S. 709 (1987).
- In the case of a non-government network, banners may establish a system administrator's "common authority" to consent to a law enforcement search pursuant to United States v. Matlock, 415 U.S. 164 (1974)." (US Department of Justice APPENDIX A: Sample Network Banner Language)
In your country different laws might apply. Please consult with your corporate legal team to assess the exact legal context and rules for banners.
Solution
Configure a login banner as shown below. The delimiter character shown is a "^", but any character can serve as a delimiter.
IOSXR(config)# banner login ^ {login_banner} ^
Impact:
Organizations provide appropriate legal notice(s) and warning(s) to persons accessing their networks by using a 'banner-text'.
Item Details
Category: ACCESS CONTROL, CONFIGURATION MANAGEMENT
References: 800-53|AC-18, 800-53|AC-18(1), 800-53|AC-18(3), 800-53|CM-2, 800-53|CM-6, 800-53|CM-7, 800-53|CM-7(1), 800-53|CM-9, CSCv7|5.1, CSCv7|11.1
Control ID: 64bf7d89397dd297ad34c668218fc7201d6c5497eda5b4a19b0c0938fd1bcd64