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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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"James" wrote in message
link.net... If you browser is showing the lock on that web site then that means that the all the exchanges between you and the web site are encrypted. It is not a completely foolproof encryption but nobody outside of places like nsa have got the computer horsepower to break it. Plus they would have to intercept your actual traffic to even begin and the comm companies have got the major routing nodes and lines pretty well locked down. I was wondering about keystroke loggers. I don't recall, but it might've been Eisboch who said he had no need for a firewall that monitored outbound nasties because he'd never been infected with anything nasty. Yet. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message ... I was wondering about keystroke loggers. I don't recall, but it might've been Eisboch who said he had no need for a firewall that monitored outbound nasties because he'd never been infected with anything nasty. Yet. Yup. That was me. And 4 days after I said it my computer at home picked up some kind of spyware thing. I keep getting pop-ups trying to sell me everything from cars to vacations to dates with beautiful, single women. It's not porn crap or anything ... just annoying junk. I went to Microsofts's Security Website and did an on-line scan and fix doober. It found and corrected a worm, but there was one file it said it could not fix. The computer ran ok for a while, then the stupid pop-ups started all over again. I adjusted the pop-up blocker to prevent *any* pop-ups, but they still come through. I'll take it to a computer shop and let them clean it up. Eisboch |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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Eisboch wrote:
"JoeSpareBedroom" wrote in message ... I was wondering about keystroke loggers. I don't recall, but it might've been Eisboch who said he had no need for a firewall that monitored outbound nasties because he'd never been infected with anything nasty. Yet. Yup. That was me. And 4 days after I said it my computer at home picked up some kind of spyware thing. I keep getting pop-ups trying to sell me everything from cars to vacations to dates with beautiful, single women. It's not porn crap or anything ... just annoying junk. I went to Microsofts's Security Website and did an on-line scan and fix doober. It found and corrected a worm, but there was one file it said it could not fix. The computer ran ok for a while, then the stupid pop-ups started all over again. I adjusted the pop-up blocker to prevent *any* pop-ups, but they still come through. I'll take it to a computer shop and let them clean it up. Eisboch I had a similar worm at work, and it was a bitch, because it reinstalls itself every time you reboot. It started in the receptionist's computer and worked it's way into the Network. Spybot, Windows Defender or AdAware were not ability to delete the worm. Our contracted computer "experts", tried for a month to get rid of the worm without success. I used HiJackThis and the experts at http://www.tomcoyote.org/hjt/ to determine what was causing the problem and how to correct it. I found an unusual file in the start up directory. It was a legitimate Windows file name, but was really the worm. The exe file would credit a random and different exe file every time it would start up. In the receptionist's computer It had created so many new files that there was over 3000 processes running in the background. I had to start up in the safe mode manually delete the file and the start up lines in the registry. Hopefully your computer shop will spend the time to verify each and every item involved in the windows start up to make sure the file is actually a legitimate file. I used HiJackThis http://www.download.com/HijackThis/3...-10379544.html to review the registry for start up items and any other methods used by spyware to take over your computer. "HijackThis lists the contents of key areas of the Registry and hard drive--areas that are used by both legitimate programmers and hijackers. The program is continually updated to detect and remove new hijacks. It does not target specific programs and URLs, only the methods used by hijackers to force you onto their sites. As a result, false positives are imminent, and unless you're sure about what you're doing, you always should consult with knowledgable folks before deleting anything. " from Download.com .. |
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