How Asus Recovery Disks Ended Up Carrying Software Cracks
Anthony_Cargile writes "We all now know about Asus shipping illegal software cracks and confidential documents/source code on their recovery DVD (and in the system root), but this article tells exactly how it happened. It's even more careless than you think, and most likely an accident."
I can how an internal ASUS USB flash disk with an unattend.xml file on it, might get used to move documents around, and then also get used to install windows.
That might explain how certain documents got put on a lot of harddrives inside ASUS.
It doesn't explain how that directly ended up being part of what they made an ISO out of, and how no one apparently did quality control and checked every single file on a CD before it was replicated and sent out to the world.
FTA:
"c:\Windows\ConfigSetRoot\ contained a software crack for the WinRar program...
So apparently an Asus employee happened to have a personal flash drive, and stored his resume (presumeably, conspiracy theorists may disagree) as well as a few harmless keygens and serials on it.."
It amazes me that this employee chose illegal means of getting an archiving program instead of using a FOSS solution such as 7-zip ( http://www.7-zip.org/).
I know some companies have protocols for handling FOSS software, but this should have never have happened if the employee had just turned to his company's legal department for obtaining software licenses.
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I am completely unsurprised. When I heard about it I thought, "Oh, some jackball inadvertently copied his personal files via some install script. That's pretty funny."
I personally have the exact same stuff on my thumb drive - my resume and some cracking tools. As we all know, nobody tests their own work. That's why testers have jobs.
So he screwed up - at least he has a good story to tell!
It's not that easy anymore, programs like windows, anti virus software just to name a few, require you to either phone a number to active the software, or connect to the internet, if you don't do that, it won't run until you do. Now add in they usally only let you install the software X number of times per key/product, your going to be screwed in ten years if you need to activate software from today. Safely storing your serial/product keys these days for long term use is pretty useless.
Great, then the mac or linux files would have been copied from the usb stick to the windows install directory. Reduces the chances of cracks appearing, but does nothing for the documents.
That sounds like the dumbest choice. The only negative effect an Asus client could have is if the USB flash drive contained malware of some description.
Condemning the whole company because of one employees ignorance of MS's stupid xml magic really is cutting your nose to spite your face.
Asus products have always been good to me.
There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter