US Government Checking Up On Vista Users?
Paris The Pirate writes "This article at Whitedust displays some very interesting logs from Vista showing connections to the DoD Information Networking Center, United Nations Development program and the Halliburton Company; for no reason other than the machine was running Vista. From the article 'After running Vista for only a few days — with a complete love for the new platform the first sign of trouble erupted. I began noticing latency on my home network connection — so I booted my port sniffing software and networking tools to see what was happening. What I found was foundation shaking. The two images below show graphical depictions of what has and IS trying to connect to my computer even in an idle state'."
The DOD NIC runs one of the DNS root servers. Yes, that's right... his DNS requests are sometimes going to the Department of Defense! Burn the government down.
The machine running the peer guardian is an XP machine. It is sniffing traffic on the local network and filtering out all the results that don't originate from the vista machine. He is running remote desktop from the Vista machine to the XP machine (the one running Peer Guardian). He probably did this because of the issues that software has with Vista, or possible because he feels that Vista would hide this information from programs running locally.
Or P2P. But, the important part is that he is showing nothing more than incoming frames, and conveniently obscures the destination port(s).
And to even get to the point where PeerGuardian (or whatever) can see the frame, it has to pass through his firewall -- presuming that he has one. And that means he either is explicitly allowing that port through or he made the connection himself.
I wonder what Task Manager would show running?
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/community/column
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