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David Woodsmall

Reliable Online Computer Repair - 6 views

Do it for free: Complete Slow Windows Computer & Slow Browser Fixes http://www.woodsmall.com/SLOW-misbehaving-computer-fixes.htm

computer problem

David Woodsmall

Computer Problem Solved - 4 views

You could probably do it for free with free software - has always worked for me Complete Slow Windows Computer & Slow Browser Fixes http://www.woodsmall.com/SLOW-misbehaving-computer-fixes.htm

computer problem

timothy999

Current internet / ISP problems, slowness and attacks - 5 views

I've recently faced the same issue. Having asked Google, I found an interesting and informative article https://www.firesticktricks.com/why-is-my-internet-so-slow.html. It provided me with the poss...

web slow internet isp connection attack

Jonas Patrick

Growing Identity Theft Problems and Identity Theft Protection. - 0 views

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    The worldwide proliferation of identity theft is an on-going problem that gets more worrisome daily. Identity thieves are shrewd and cunning.
shalani mujer

They Effectively Fixed My laptop - 2 views

I love to surf the internet using my laptop, then one day it just stopped running. I did not know what to do since the blue screen error did not disappear though I have tried rebooting my laptop. ...

PC technical support

started by shalani mujer on 10 Nov 11 no follow-up yet
Skeptical Debunker

Web Posts May Make You Vulnerable To Crime : NPR - 0 views

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    It's fun to brag when you're at a great bar or going off on vacation. Social networking sites and location-based apps have made it easy to broadcast that kind of information to your friends. The problem is that you may not just be making your friends jealous, but supplying criminals with useful information as well. A new Web site called PleaseRobMe.com has drawn attention to the issue by repurposing posts from foursquare, a social networking site that lets people share the latest about their whereabouts. PleaseRobMe demonstrates that it's easy for anyone to find out you're not at home - and therefore, are presenting an "opportunity" for burglary. "There are physical and economic safety risks when you're publicizing to the world where you are," says Kevin Bankston, a senior staff attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "It's obviously a treasure trove of information for criminals. PleaseRobMe is a good demonstration of how easy it is."
Skeptical Debunker

Hold vendors liable for buggy software, group says - 0 views

  • "The only way programming errors can be eradicated is by making software development organizations legally liable for the errors," he said. SANS and Mitre, a Bedford, Mass.-based government contractor, also released their second annual list of the top 25 security errors made by programmers. The authors said those errors have been at the root of almost every major type of cyberattack, including the recent hacks of Google and numerous utilities and government agencies. According to the list, the most common mistakes continue to involve SQL injection errors, cross-site scripting flaws and buffer overflow vulnerabilities. All three have been well-known problems for
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    A coalition of security experts from more than 30 organizations is urging enterprises to exert more pressure on software vendors to ensure that they use secure code development practices. The group, led by the SANS Institute and Mitre Corp., offered enterprises recent hacks of Google draft contract language that would require vendors to adhere to a strict set of security standards for software development. In essence, the terms would make vendors liable for software defects that lead to security breaches. "Nearly every attack is enabled by [programming] mistakes that provide a handhold for attackers," said Alan Paller, director of research at SANS, a security training and certification group.
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    Of course, a more general way to address this and other "business" generated problems / abuses (like expensive required "arbitration" by companies owned and in bed with the companies requiring the arbitration!), is to FORBID contract elements that effectively strip any party of certain "rights" (like the right to sue for defectives; the right to freedom of speech; the right to warranty protections; the right to hold either party to public or published promises / representations, etc.). Basically, by making LYING and DECEIT and NEGLIGENCE liability and culpability unrestricted. Or will we hear / be told that being honest and producing a quality product is "anti-business"? What!? Is this like, if I can't lie and cheat being in business isn't worth it!? If that is true, then those parties and businesses could just as well "go away"! Just as "conservatives" say other criminals like that should. One may have argued that the software industry would never have "gotten off the ground" (at least, as fast as it did) if such strict liability had been enforced (as say, was eventually and is more often applied to physical building and their defects / collapses). That is, that the EULAs and contracts typically accompanying software ("not represented as fit for any purpose" more or less!) had been restricted. On the other hand, we might have gotten software somewhat slower but BETTER - NOT being associated with or causing the BILLIONS of dollars in losses due to bugs, security holes, etc. Others will rail that this will merely "make lawyers richer". So what if it will? As long as government isn't primarily "on the side" of the majority of the people (you know, like a "democracy" should be), then being able to get a individual "hired gun" is one of the only ways for the "little guy" to effectively defend themselves from corporate criminals and other "special interest" elites.
hansel molly

Great Remote Computer Support Services - 2 views

Computer Support Professional offers unrivaled online computer support services that gave me the assurance that my computer is in good hands. Every time I needed the help of their computer support ...

computer support

started by hansel molly on 06 Jun 11 no follow-up yet
seth kutcher

Two Thumbs Up For Computer Assistance Services - 2 views

I am so happy for the computer assistance that Computer Assistance Online gave me. They provided me with precise and fast solutions to my computer problem. Their computer specialists really know wh...

computer assistance

started by seth kutcher on 06 Jun 11 no follow-up yet
anonymous

Fix Slow Running Computer Now - 0 views

My computer is running so slow so I contact Fix Slow Computers Online. They offer online computer support services to fix slow computers. They have the best computer tech specialists who know how t...

fix slow computers

started by anonymous on 12 May 11 no follow-up yet
David Woodsmall

Software Support Saved My Spring Days - 3 views

This seems to be a re-occurring advertisement, in my personal opinion fix it for free Complete Slow Windows Computer & Slow Browser Fixes http://www.woodsmall.com/SLOW-misbehaving-computer-fixes.htm

software support

shalani mujer

PC Tech Support Saved the Day - 1 views

I am an owner of a small business office in Lancaster, California. I specialize in SEO, providing services to several people, most of them are in my own locality too. However, there was a day when ...

PC tech support

started by shalani mujer on 10 Nov 11 no follow-up yet
wolf hesse

Denial of service denial | Science Blog - 3 views

  • However, current filters usually rely on the computer being attacked to check whether or not incoming information requests are legitimate or not. This consumes its resources and in the case of a massive DDoS can compound the problem.
  • The user's computer has to present a filter value for the server to do a quick check. The filter value is a one-time secret that needs to be presented with the pseudo ID. The pseudo ID is also one-time use. Attackers cannot forge either of these values correctly and so attack packets are filtered out.
  • Indeed, the IPACF takes just 6 nanoseconds to reject a non-legitimate information packet associated with the DoS attack.
Seçkin Anıl Ünlü

Plugging the CSS History Leak at Mozilla Security Blog - 0 views

  • History Sniffing
  • Links can look different on web sites based on whether or not you’ve visited the page they reference.
  • The problem is that appearance can be detected by the page showing you links, cluing the page into which of the presented pages you’ve been to. The result: not only can you see where you’ve been, but so can the web site!
  • ...18 more annotations...
  • The most obvious fix is to disable different styles for visited versus unvisted links, but this would be employed at the expense of utility: while sites can no longer figure out which links you’ve clicked, neither can you.
  • David Baron has implemented a way to help keep users’ data private while minimizing the effect on the web, and we are deploying it to protect our users.
  • The biggest threats here are the high-bandwidth techniques, or those that extract lots of information from users’ browsers quickly.
  • The JavaScript function getComputedStyle() and its related functions are fast and can be used to guess visitedness at hundreds of thousands of links per minute.
  • we’re approaching the way we style links in three fairly subtle ways:
  • Change 1: Layout-Based Attacks
  • First of all, we’re limiting what types of styling can be done to visited links to differentiate them from unvisited links.
  • can only be different in color
  • the CSS 2.1 specification takes into consideration how visited links can be abused:
  • implement other measures to preserve the user’s privacy while rendering visited and unvisited links differently
  • Change 2: Some Timing Attacks
  • we are changing some of the guts of our layout engine to provide a fairly uniform flow of execution to minimize differences in layout time for visited and unvisited links.
  • when the link is styled, the appropriate set of styles is chosen making the code paths for visited and unvisited links essentially the same length.
  • Change 3: Computed Style Attacks
  • JavaScript is not going to have access to the same style data it used to.
  • Firefox will give it unvisited style values.
  • it’s the right trade-off to be sure we protect our users’ privacy.
  • fixing CSS history sniffing will not block all of these leaks. But we believe it’s important to stop the scariest, most effective history attacks any way we can since it will be a big win for users’ privacy.
shalani mujer

One on One Professional Online Tech Support - 3 views

I love working with these guys. Their tech support technicians are very professional and polite. They offer one-on-one tech support. They listen to what your issues are, diagnose what your problem ...

tech support

started by shalani mujer on 06 Jun 11 no follow-up yet
sally pearson

Computer Help like No Other! - 1 views

ComputerHelpFastOnline answered my call for computer help fast! I never expected how quickly they can resolve my computer problem. Their computer help expert technicians really knew their job and...

computer help

started by sally pearson on 13 Jul 11 no follow-up yet
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