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  1. #726
    Excommunicated baldrick's Avatar
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    try it and find out

    I use it because it sets the windows GUI back to the old style without all the bullsh1t pretty stuff

    I would expect you to get the normal taskbar

    you can always turn it off

  2. #727
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Buckaroo Banzai View Post
    every time i see a win 10 update I get anxiety attacks.
    Just did my Win 10 update, now the battery status icon is gone from my tray.
    Did you try clicking the little "up" chevron and seeing if it's there? And if it is, drag it back into the taskbar.

    But if you're really too thick to know that's how Windows works after all this time, and it's giving you "anxiety attacks" then yes, go and get a Mac. They're designed for people who don't really understand computers and want their little hands held all the time.

  3. #728
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Microsoft Issues the Update to Announce the End of Windows 7 Updates

    By: Wayne Rash | March 25, 2019

    It’s not exactly the Windows Update to end all updates, but it’s close. Windows 7 machines that downloaded the most recent round of official updates got one that doesn’t do much beyond telling you to stop using Windows 7. The way it’s supposed to work is that computers running Windows 7 will start getting pop-up notices beginning April 18 letting them know that all support for Windows 7 will end on Jan. 14, 2020.


    The pop-up notice will provide a link to additional information on Microsoft’s website letting you know your upgrade options, including buying new computers, which is what the company really wants you to do. While the notices aren’t supposed to appear until April, some users are reporting seeing them already. When the notice does appear, you can check a box in the lower left corner telling the alert not to appear again.

    This is Microsoft’s gentle (but not subtle) means of telling you that it’s high time to stop fooling around and update Windows. But by now, you know this. Problem is, you’re one of hundreds of millions of places where Windows 7 is still running, and while there are some instances in which you can stick with it, in nearly every case you can’t. It’s reaching its end of life, and continuing to use it after next January will mean using a system that’s more and more vulnerable to security risks.


    Why So Many Still Haven’t Upgraded to Windows 10

    So why haven’t you upgraded your Windows 7 machines? There are a number of reasons, a couple of which are legitimate.



    • You just haven’t gotten around to it. Procrastination will eventually create headaches as new software won’t work. Worse, you’ll be vulnerable to an ever wider range of attacks and exploits, and you may not be able to do anything about it. You need to move forward.
    • You’re concerned that your applications won’t work. Windows 10 has a compatibility mode that will tell your applications that you’re running Windows 7 (or XP or whatever), and it works quite well. But for the most part, commercial applications will work fine. Some custom applications may have trouble, but it’s unlikely. If it is a problem, consider upgrading to Windows 8.1 to see if that works. Meanwhile, update your custom apps.
    • You don’t want to spend the money to update. You could have upgraded to Windows 10 when it was free. However, you may still be able to perform a clean install of Windows 10 and use your existing Windows 7 installation key. Microsoft enabled this over a year ago, and it may still work.
    • Your computer won’t run Windows 10. There are a few computers, including my ancient HP xw8200 workstation, that cannot run Windows 10. All you can do in this case is continue with Windows 7 and hope for the best, or you can run a different operating system such as Linux. Or you can replace your old computer with a new one. I did both with a new HP workstation, and I’m getting a copy of Linux that understands my SCSI controllers on the old one.
    • You have an enterprise license. You can arrange for continued support for some business installations of Windows 7. This is a feature of some enterprise contracts with Microsoft, and you may be able to add this support if you don’t already have it.
    • You have embedded Windows 7 and can’t upgrade. Embedded Windows in ATMs, gas pumps, POS devices, medical devices and other embedded applications aren’t subject to the end-of-life limits for other Windows 7 installations. Microsoft has an FAQ about this.


    Considering the rate at which internet of things (IoT) devices running Windows are spreading, that last point might end up being the largest installed base of Windows 7 still extant. And, like everything else in the IoT world, this means that security issues will follow embedded Windows until the device makers start following the new federal guidelines and make their devices so they can be updated.


    From a business perspective, running on an old, unsupported operating system is pretty hard to defend. Windows 7 came out 10 years ago, and you’ve known for at least five years that the operating system’s days were numbered. You’ve known the exact end of support date for over a year now. And you’ve known for longer than that about Microsoft’s plan to stop supporting Windows 7.


    Even if you run a very small business, the investment required to keep your technology current is fairly minimal. It’s probably going to cost less to buy a new computer than it will cost you for business lunches over the course of a month, and unlike lunch, newer technology will improve your efficiency and also reduce your risks. You should be budgeting for hardware replacements over the course of three or four years for each machine, anyway.


    The best way to think about the patch that will start nagging you to update Windows in April is with thanks. You’ve been reminded in enough time that even if you have a lengthy procurement process, you still have time to either update Windows or to update your computer with a new one. Neither path is particularly arduous, especially compared with the pain of recovering from a breach that happened when you didn’t take action.

    https://www.eweek.com/enterprise-app...dows-7-updates


  4. #729
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    If anyone is running these models of D-Link router, go in and check your DNS hasn't been tampered with, and make sure you update to the latest firmware.

    The first DNS hijacking exploit attempts targeted multiple models of D-Link DSL modems, including:



    Also these:

    *** The Security News Thread  ***-dns-hijacking-exploit-attempts-png
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails *** The Security News Thread  ***-dns-hijacking-exploit-attempts-png  

  5. #730
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    No Huawei routers listed?

  6. #731
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OhOh View Post
    No Huawei routers listed?
    Oh no, the chinky spies have their own page.

    https://www.cvedetails.com/vulnerabi...79/Huawei.html

  7. #732

  8. #733
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Yes, but in the case of the rest you know they aren't put there deliberately (unless they are other chinky spying shit).

  9. #734
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    ^ So the errors etc. must be by poor project specs, bad programming, insufficient checking or inadequate development control then?

    If so, that is exactly what Huawei is accused of by the UK auditors.

    Or can you suggest other reasons that these problems are occurring?

  10. #735
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OhOh View Post
    ^ So the errors etc. must be by poor project specs, bad programming, insufficient checking or inadequate development control then?

    If so, that is exactly what Huawei is accused of by the UK auditors.

    Or can you suggest other reasons that these problems are occurring?
    Are you stupid or something?

    Everyone knows the chinkies leave backdoors in everything.

    They are dirty little spies.

    Do I have to post the designs they've stolen AGAIN for it to sink in?

    Or are you just going to carry on with your snivelling chinky brown nosing?

  11. #736
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Easter Attack Affects Half a Billion Apple iOS Users via Chrome Bug


    About a half a billion Apple iOS users (and counting) have been hit by session-hijacking cybercriminals bent on serving up malware. They’re exploiting an unpatched flaw in the Chrome for iOS browser, to bypass sandboxing and hijack user sessions, targeting iPhone and iPad users.


    The attacks are the work of the eGobbler gang, researchers said, which has a track record of mounting large-scale malvertising attacks ahead of major holiday weekends. Easter is coming up, and the crooks are banking on consumers spending a lot more time than usual browsing the web on their phones.

    Session hijacking occurs when a user is browsing a web page and is suddenly redirected to another site or landing page, or when a pop-up appears that one can’t exit out of. The pages look like ads from well-known brands; but in reality, if a user clicks on one of them, a payload is deployed.


    In this case, “the campaign…is currently still active under ‘.site’ TLD landing pages,” said Eliya Stein at Confiant, in an analysis this week. “With half a billion user sessions impacted, this is among the top three massive malvertising campaigns that we have seen in the last 18 months.”

    The offensive is mainly targeting U.S. users, though some European activity has been observed.


    Meanwhile, at least one other research firm said that the attack is effective against Apple Safari users as well – opening up a much larger threat surface, given that most iOS users make use of Apple’s default browser for mobile web surfing.

    https://threatpost.com/easter-attack-apple-ios/143901/

  12. #737
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Doh!!


    [QUOTE]
    China-based app maker ignored repeated warnings by researchers that its password database – stored in plain text – was accessible to anyone online.

    More than 2 million passwords for Wi-Fi hotspots were leaked online by the Android app developer behind the mobile application called WiFi Finder. The passwords were part of an insecure database found by researchers at GDI Foundation.

    The Android app itself did not just help users find Wi-Fi hotspots, but also supplied username and passwords that were crowdsourced by the apps users. According to researchers, the total database included 2 million username and password pairs, with tens-of-thousands of hotspots located in the United States, according to TechCrunch, which
    first reported the leaky server.


    GDI Foundation said the developer is based in China and the app has been downloaded
    “thousands” of times by users. Data included public and private hotspots, but also “countless” numbers of home Wi-Fi hotspots.

    https://threatpost.com/leaky_app_data/144029/


    [/QUOTE]

  13. #738
    Excommunicated baldrick's Avatar
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    err - so what

    free wifi as long as your device is secure and you don't like MIM attacks - onwards

  14. #739
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by baldrick View Post
    err - so what

    free wifi as long as your device is secure and you don't like MIM attacks - onwards
    And what do you think is the probability that people who would use an app like this understand either security or the consequences?

    In fairness, you'd have to be that dumb - almost Buttplugian one would say - that someone has probably compromised your router and home network already.

  15. #740
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    "Researchers" finding a China story, 'arry lives for such things.

  16. #741
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OhOh View Post
    "Researchers" finding a China story, 'arry lives for such things.
    Awwwww wassup snowflake.

  17. #742
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    All available no doubt at your, "not for profit, but agency funded", site, "China Tittle-Tattle - All the unproven garbage one can find.com"

  18. #743
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by OhOh View Post
    All available no doubt at your, "not for profit, but agency funded", site, "China Tittle-Tattle - All the unproven garbage one can find.com"
    Actually, just news sites.

    I expect you don't get these reports on IAMACHINKYBROWNNOSER.COM

  19. #744
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    *** The Security News Thread  ***-52896813_2165043056878276_6762360973157203968_n-jpg
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails *** The Security News Thread  ***-52896813_2165043056878276_6762360973157203968_n-jpg  

  20. #745
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Always a handy reminder....


    *** The Security News Thread  ***-v56f3ltvblv21-jpg
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails *** The Security News Thread  ***-v56f3ltvblv21-jpg  

  21. #746
    Thailand Expat OhOh's Avatar
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    50,000 companies exposed to hacks of 'business critical' SAP systems: researchers


    "LONDON (Reuters) - Up to 50,000 companies running SAP software are at greater risk of being hacked after security researchers found new ways to exploit vulnerabilities of systems that haven’t been properly protected and published the tools to do so online.

    German software giant SAP said it issued guidance on how to correctly configure the security settings in 2009 and 2013. But data compiled by security firm Onapsis shows that 90 percent of affected SAP systems have not been properly protected.

    “Basically, a company can be brought to a halt in a matter of seconds,” said Onapsis Chief Executive Mariano Nunez, whose company specializes in securing business applications such as those made by SAP and rival Oracle.

    “With these exploits, a hacker could steal anything that sits on a company’s SAP systems and also modify any information there – so he can perform financial fraud, withdraw money, or just plainly sabotage and disrupt the systems.”

    SAP said: “SAP always strongly recommends to install security fixes as they are released.”

    SAP software is used by more than 90 percent of the world’s top 2,000 to manage everything from employee payrolls to product distribution and industrial processes. "

    Continues;

    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-sap-security/50000-companies-exposed-to-hacks-of-business-critical-sap-systems-researchers-idUSKCN1S80VJ?il=0




    Dodgy EU software to be banned?
    Last edited by OhOh; 02-05-2019 at 08:16 PM.

  22. #747
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    It's nothing new. It's a default configuration that SAP say you should change for your environment.

    I don't see how they can say it affects 90% of the world's SAP sites unless they've had internal access to all of them.

    Someone is promoting their services to pointy-haired bosses I suspect.

    *** The Security News Thread  ***-4966752-gif
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails *** The Security News Thread  ***-4966752-gif  

  23. #748
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    That Dell crapware.... get rid.

    Remote Code Execution on most Dell computers

    What computer do you use? Who made it? Have you ever thought about what came with your computer? When we think of Remote Code Execution (RCE) vulnerabilities in mass, we might think of vulnerabilities in the operating system, but another attack vector to consider is “What third-party software came with my PC?”. In this article, I’ll be looking at a Remote Code Execution vulnerability I found in Dell SupportAssist, software meant to “proactively check the health of your system’s hardware and software” and which is “preinstalled on most of all new Dell devices”.

    https://d4stiny.github.io/Remote-Code-Execution-on-most-Dell-computers/


  24. #749
    Excommunicated baldrick's Avatar
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    Acer , lenovo and now dell have made this stupid mistake

    how many people actually call these companies and ask for remote assistance via this sort of connection ?

  25. #750
    Excommunicated baldrick's Avatar
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    firefox extension fcukup

    fixes here if you want to get them working again before they get their sh1t into a pile and fix the problem

    http://www.reddit.com/r/firefox/comments/bkhtv8/heres_whats_going_on_with_your_addons_being/

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