I wonder why I haven't ever had a rootkit on my Linux installations but I fix M$ installations all the time(Vista included) that have been rootkitted. Once a week at least.
Odd, I've had this Vista Machine running for about a year, and have yet to get a rootkit. Then again I have yet to get a rootkit on my OS X, or on my CentOS or my FreeBSD... or my...
Basically, you are telling us that you shut off your firewall on the Vista box and just waited for a rootkit? I assume you must have been rushing in, like installing a bunch of remote control servers on standard ports without password...
debian etch, RHEL, centos, all 300 odd servers stayed up. so did irix and solaris boxen from ancient times of the roman empire..
Same deal at the data center I work at. Debian, Gentoo, FreeBSD 6/7, RedHat, CentOS.... 32 bit and 64 bit alike. Single Core, Dual Core, Quad Core, all various chipsets. No midnight crashes.
The SP1 contains the new Microsoft AI. It polls the user accounts on the machine and determines a personality of the person based on it. If at that point, the operating system doesn't like it's user, it will lock them out.
What if they could use such a feature to ban usage by Mobo serial numbers? It would be a bit complicated, but should be able to work. Good way to get rid of a user instead of IP bans.
Search in google "filetype:torrent Wolverine" and see what it gets you.
From the article, the guys don't seem worried. Appeals are forthcoming.
I would just do Wolverine ext:torrent
I wonder why I haven't ever had a rootkit on my Linux installations but I fix M$ installations all the time(Vista included) that have been rootkitted. Once a week at least.
Odd, I've had this Vista Machine running for about a year, and have yet to get a rootkit. Then again I have yet to get a rootkit on my OS X, or on my CentOS or my FreeBSD... or my... Basically, you are telling us that you shut off your firewall on the Vista box and just waited for a rootkit? I assume you must have been rushing in, like installing a bunch of remote control servers on standard ports without password...
The end is near! Y2K9 BUG! Apparently the calendar was a bit off, but the computers all knew the real turn of the century.
debian etch, RHEL, centos, all 300 odd servers stayed up. so did irix and solaris boxen from ancient times of the roman empire..
Same deal at the data center I work at. Debian, Gentoo, FreeBSD 6/7, RedHat, CentOS.... 32 bit and 64 bit alike. Single Core, Dual Core, Quad Core, all various chipsets. No midnight crashes.
Can't an American also be a terrorist? Haven't American's already caused terror on America? Everyone is a potential terrorist.
The SP1 contains the new Microsoft AI. It polls the user accounts on the machine and determines a personality of the person based on it. If at that point, the operating system doesn't like it's user, it will lock them out.
So... That confirms there is no god? Or proves that we should teach Darwin in schools? Instead of the God Creation stuff?
What if they could use such a feature to ban usage by Mobo serial numbers? It would be a bit complicated, but should be able to work. Good way to get rid of a user instead of IP bans.
I believe this may answer your question: http://grc.com/dos/drdos.htm
I believe this may answer your question:
http://grc.com/dos/drdos.htm