Story at InformationWeek, Slashdotted, so it might be slow-loading:
http://www.informationweek.com/news/...leID=196901062
--
the alt.privacy.spyware FAQ:
http://shplink.com/misc/FAQ.htm
Story at InformationWeek, Slashdotted, so it might be slow-loading:
http://www.informationweek.com/news/...leID=196901062
--
the alt.privacy.spyware FAQ:
http://shplink.com/misc/FAQ.htm
shplink wrote:
> Story at InformationWeek, Slashdotted, so it might be slow-loading:
>
> http://www.informationweek.com/news/...leID=196901062
With Javascript disabled, it loads very quickly.
Ron
Ron Lopshire wrote:
> shplink wrote:
>
>> Story at InformationWeek, Slashdotted, so it might be slow-loading:
>>
>> http://www.informationweek.com/news/...leID=196901062
>
>
> With Javascript disabled, it loads very quickly.
>
> Ron
If there were an emoticon convention signifying "Rolling Eyes Upward"
I'd use it!
Good times, Ron: Thanks!
--
the alt.privacy.spyware FAQ:
http://shplink.com/misc/FAQ.htm
In article <oMidnTW24_gzdzPYnZ2dnUVZ_smonZ2d@bresnan.com>,
shplink <shplink@removeme.shplink.com> wrote:
>Story at InformationWeek, Slashdotted, so it might be slow-loading:
>
>http://www.informationweek.com/news/...leID=196901062
I read this article. The authors gave their top recommendation to a
product named Rootkit Unhooker. It is developed by a small
organization in Russia.
I tried it. I was unable to interpret its output. And, now I am not
sleeping well at all. What if RK Unhooker is itself malware?
Sigh.
--
David Arnstein (00)
arnstein+usenet@pobox.com {{ }}
^^
David Arnstein wrote:
> In article <oMidnTW24_gzdzPYnZ2dnUVZ_smonZ2d@bresnan.com>,
> shplink <shplink@removeme.shplink.com> wrote:
>> Story at InformationWeek, Slashdotted, so it might be slow-loading:
>>
>> http://www.informationweek.com/news/...leID=196901062
>
> I read this article. The authors gave their top recommendation to a
> product named Rootkit Unhooker. It is developed by a small
> organization in Russia.
>
> I tried it. I was unable to interpret its output. And, now I am not
> sleeping well at all. What if RK Unhooker is itself malware?
well, i'm not so sure i'd try rkunhooker either after reading this
http://www.antirootkit.com/blog/2007...table-rootkit/
seems to me that if you're anti-X you shouldn't be making X's...
--
"it's not the right time to be sober
now the idiots have taken over
spreading like a social cancer,
is there an answer?"
"David Arnstein" <arnstein@panix.com> wrote in message
news:eoo9t5$sur$1@reader2.panix.com...
> In article <oMidnTW24_gzdzPYnZ2dnUVZ_smonZ2d@bresnan.com>,
> shplink <shplink@removeme.shplink.com> wrote:
>>Story at InformationWeek, Slashdotted, so it might be slow-loading:
>>
>>http://www.informationweek.com/news/...leID=196901062
>
> I read this article. The authors gave their top recommendation to a
> product named Rootkit Unhooker. It is developed by a small
> organization in Russia.
>
> I tried it. I was unable to interpret its output. And, now I am not
> sleeping well at all. What if RK Unhooker is itself malware?
If it is, you and I are both infected. It kept telling me there was a
stream running that kept it from loading properly.
cmsix
>
> Sigh.
> --
> David Arnstein (00)
> arnstein+usenet@pobox.com {{ }}
> ^^
On Thu, 18 Jan 2007 17:14:13 +0000 (UTC), David Arnstein wrote:
> I tried it. I was unable to interpret its output. And, now I am not
> sleeping well at all. What if RK Unhooker is itself malware?
Are you equally suspicious of KAV?
And IceSword originates in China. Ye gods, the very heart of the Evil
Empire! Is there no end to this?
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