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Hacker Alert
I haven't try it, but if it works i guess people have good use for it.
There been some people how had been hacked, and if the one how hacket your account probebly going to get the guild bank to !!! If the guild Bank get robbed who will you blame. A Hacker alert PrivateEye http://wow.curse.com/downloads/wow-a...ject-6487.aspx |
What are you talking about?
The addon you linked to hasn't been updated for a year now. And I'm not sure if you think its a "hacker" or if you are suggesting we get it due to hackers? |
That's what I thought last night, too (I misread it). The op is saying it might prevent hacking.
There's no telling unless you've tried it, but it may not need an update. |
The best way to prevent hacking is knowing what your doing while on-line.
Get a good internet security program, use firefox, and stay away from questionable sites. |
The purpose of the mod linked at first post is not to prevent hacking of "your" account.
It's a means for a group of accounts to verify each other and be alerted if one of them is compromised next time the hacker logs on. If a character is logged on from a PC other than the legitimate owner's with the addon installed (like would be typical in case of a keylogged account being used from a computer other than the owner's) the rest of the group will get a notification that "so and so didn't respond to Private Eye communication so might be under control of hacker" (or something to that effect). |
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That's actually a pretty groovy little mod you have there. The op is definitely showing this mod as a form of account security. It may not prevent you from getting hacked, but I think it's an amazing way to recover a hacked account.
KLamb213 makes an amazing point about keeping yourself safe, but to be fair, I'm your average twenty-something guy, and I exhibit average twenty-something guy behavior on the net. This means I do have a habit of visiting less than reputable sites. What's more, I use Internet Explorer to do it, and I don't have any internet security or clean up programs. Strange thing, though: my computer's security hasn't been compromised in the last 5 years. With all of IE's most recent updates and all the things Microsoft has built into their browser now, it's just as secure a browser as Firefox, Opera, Chrome, or any other browser you want to throw out there. I've also learned how to keep my browsing behavior in check so that I know when there are security issues on any site. Here's what I do:
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WOOT!!!! |
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Would just like to add here 2 tools I regularly use to check if a site's on the up and up : * domaintools.com .. check the whois record and see who has it registered. * Firefox's Get info window security tab. _Any_ site that asks me for my Blizzard user name and password I check throughly to make sure (a) It's run by Blizzard (b) It has a security certificate signed by Blizzard Enterntainment. I find out the Blizzard uses Premium Security Licenses from Thawte Consulting CC. On investigation those things aren't cheap - they run up to $3000 for a 5 year license. Or $699 for a 1 year license. Not the type of man a hackers going to be able to afford ! https://www.thawte.com/process/retai...oductType=ssl3 |
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You haven't been compromised that you know of. Most viruses(viri?), keyloggers, etc, aren't exactly advertising they are they are there. Keeping a program from showing up in windows task manager is actually pretty trivial. More complex (but still possible) is keeping it's files from showing up in the file system. That doesn't mean these aren't good tips, or that you have necessarily been hacked, just that it's not an end-all solution. |
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This is a great point, and one reason that once a month I will uninstall my regular virus scanner, install another one and update it and run a deep scan. I'll do this with several scanners, and even do the same thing with malware scanners. I've too much cash invested in this machine and it also serves as a work computer, so I'm pretty anal about keeping it clean and safe. |
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They are just a less likely target. |
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The view that Macs cannot get viruses is completely false. Macs CAN get a virus just as easily as a pc can, BUT virus developers have up until recently focused exclusively on pc viruses because thats what most people had. With Macs becoming more and more popular, soon you will begin seeing viruses popping up for people who use macs. What makes it worse is that virus protection is sub-par for the mac because noone thought they would need any and devs focused almost exclusively on the pc side.
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Nah. Mac's are nice, but not that nice. Quote:
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I'm a Mac Head myself and I can tell you the real reason why you don't see viruses for Mac. It's really not worth it. I don't deny that it's possible but when you have a larger target that takes less time to break into where would you break into ? There's more vulnerabilities for Windows then there is for OS X. On the Mac to install any system software you need to enter an admin user name and password. I've not seen 1 attack vector yet that can get past that. I've not seen any news about Mail.app being comprimised in such a way that it can get email address's out of Mail.app's address book. I see news about Linux viruses but none of OS X. So people keep making the "if only macs had more market share they would have more viruses". Well according to some figure I found on the net it's gone up 4% over the last 2 years. Still to see a confirmed virus for the Mac OS X Platform. Quote:
Every Intel Mac can also run Windows whether through Boot Camp or Parallels or some other means. So of course if you own a Mac that has a Windows install on it somewhere either in a partition or on a virtual machine yes you will need virus software for your windows side. In fact the only hint of a virus the Mac has had was really a trojan. You would go to a (****) site that would tell you it needed to update your Quicktime. You would download a package that looked reasonably legit to the less informed user. A dialog would come up saying it needs your admin username and password. User would enter it in and the whole machine will restart. You would think that when given an admin username and password it would do something malicious right ? Wrong - all it does is change the users DNS and IP settings :eek:. Something that can be changed back without much trouble. Now as threats go that's pretty much a rabid toothless rabbit :p ! The above was not a virus - it was a trojan in that it was not self replicating. Of all the damage it could do (rm -r / for example) it only does something that can be easily fixed. No the fix for it would not be in bringing virus protection software to the mac but to make sure the casual user is educated on how software is installed for the Mac and to only install system software via Software Update. The fix for the above trojan can be quickly found within a few minutes on Google. |
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