Largest Hacking Scam in Canadian History
vieux schnock writes "Police raided several homes across Quebec on Wednesday and arrested 16 people in their investigation, which they say uncovered the largest hacking scam in Canadian history. (...) The hackers collaborated online to attack and take control of as many as one million computers around the world that were not equipped with anti-virus software or firewalls."
init 11 - for when you need that edge.
Both.
16 people were arrested.
14 of those 16 were arrested on Wednesday.
This is one way for the anti-virus companies to stay in business.
I'd assume you're always authorized to use your own computer.
Then again, in today's climate, maybe not...
To make matters worse, some attacks may even occur if you are dealing with safe file types, like a PNG or even PDF. Some security problems exist due to the user's ignorance or idiocy but "some" isn't exactly the same thing as "all".
Slashdot, fix your code or at least hire someone who is competent at it to do it for you.
The average user cannot tell there is a difference - because the Windows default is to hide the extension!
It may be criminally insane, but its the default.
Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
It may be criminally insane, but its the default. That's one that's driven me crazy for years. I'm sure it goes back to early days of Windows and their attempt to look more like Mac OS 9 (which got the file type info from the resource fork). Any time I do something for anyone on their Windows machine and the extensions are hidden I just change the setting...I don't even ask if that's what they want.
Who else here has ever been trying to walk someone though a software install over the phone and said "Now double click 'Setup'"...and they respond "which one"...because of course there's setup.exe, setup.ini, etc etc...just awful.
It's funny because now it's all over the news here in Québec, and pseudo-experts are trying to explain *how* to secure one's computer. Don't you guys understand that Windows *is* insecure!
The people who got hacked are facing a maximum of 10 years in prison but with Québec's system, they really do 1/6 of this time so it's not that bad..
iTx Technologies: Open source development in Montreal