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Thread: Is the joke on us .. ???

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    Junior Member ssuperdave's Avatar
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    Cool Is the joke on us .. ???

    I keep hearing about this april fools day virus .. Anybody else heer about this .. is there something extra we need to protect our pc's with .. and I was wondering .. whats this windows 7 .. ??? ..

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    Senior Member drragostea's Avatar
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    A Google search with the term "april fools day virus" gave me this link:
    http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/03/24/c...computer.worm/
    -
    It seems like it has to do with the Conficker/Downadup trojan. Scary stuff .

    Windows 7 is the next operating system that Microsoft is developing, it should come out soon maybe in late 2009 or this summer. Some people call it "Vista 2.0" since there were many complaints about Vista.

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    Member of Team Spybot tashi's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by drragostea View Post
    ... since there were many complaints about Vista.
    Often by people who had never installed it.

    The Mojave Experiment Windows 7
    Microsoft MVP Reconnect 2018-
    Windows Insider MVP 2016-2018
    Microsoft Consumer Security MVP 2006-2016

  4. #4
    129260
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    Lightbulb I have messed with vista

    And boy, what a mess. I think it is one of those operating systems that is a hit or miss. Clearly, Vista is a miss. It was criticized mostly for its huge system requirements, and in most cases was slower then XP on the same hardware. In my opinion, Vista was rushed out the door. The only time I have seen Vista work flawlessly was on a very powerful machine. It seems like as long as you have a good spec system, it will run just fine. However, most users don't have high end machines. And this is why windows 7 is going to shine. It works on both amazing and average hardware; flawlessly.

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    Quote Originally Posted by 129260 View Post
    And this is why windows 7 is going to shine.
    If UAC stays broken... i don't think so. http://blogs.zdnet.com/hardware/?p=3461.

  6. #6
    129260
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    Lightbulb true

    But Uac works perfectly fine for me. I like the fact I can customize how I want to be notified in windows 7, etc. I have Uac on its highest setting, and it doesn't bother me to much. But I see your point. I wouldn't go so far to call it broken though. Users do not want to be annoyed, its there choice. The problem with making something like windows is, if the people want something, or don't want something, you have to listen. You can't "ignore" your customers without expecting to loose them. It's just the way things are. People do not want to be bothered, they just want things dead simple. Problem is, how to provide security in a simple environment. That is the real question. If you want things dead simple, switch to mac or ubuntu. (After you set up ubuntu for them its simple haha.) Of course, wherever the majority of people go, that is the operating system that is going to be attacked, and well; have a ton of problems. I don't blame Microsoft, I blame the users. Most users just turned Uac off because they could not ether:

    1.) Understand them

    2.) didn't want to be bothered every time they try to do something.

    I like UAC, but most people do not. And Microsoft had to change the way they do things. Even though Before it was much better.

    Also, while I think about it; I also think that the people that make programs were to blame as well. Publishers knew most people run with administrative privileges, so they became lazy and only developed programs that worked under those admin rights. This is why Microsoft created Uac. To force publishers to fix there programs from always needing admin rights, especially when there was no need for them to have it it the first place.

    Similar article I read found here.
    Last edited by 129260; 2009-03-26 at 15:03.

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    Windows Vista Home works fine, though of course it's slow to startup, on a Sony Viao 1.5 GHz P4 w/512MB of RAM originally purchased in late 2002. The primary reason I fresh installed it on this PC was security for my sister's family and it's done the job, even when my nephew tried to let one of the fake AV/AS products install. Unfortunately, most of the general population doesn't really care about their own security until it's too late and they've already been infected and/or had their identity stolen.

    Though Vista wasn't actually rushed, its release was badly delayed, so Microsoft decided to release at an intermediate point in its development which resulted in several problems. Though the performance issue was obvious, the larger issue was actually that vendors (Dell, HP, and many others) hadn't properly prepared for the driver changes required, especially as it related to kernel mode drivers. These could, and did, cause a new Dell Inspiron Laptop sold 6 months after the release of Vista to corrupt itself several times before I found all of the horribly out of date Roxio and other drivers that were causing the problem.

    As for Windows 7, it was planned from the release of Vista that the next OS upgrade would be released about 2 years later to avoid another several year stretch without a new version. Of course this version would be largely based on the Vista core, which is actually good since there was never really anything wrong with it and the PC hardware vendors have had two years to bring their drivers up to date. It also gave Microsoft time to optimize the OS and allow it to work better on most older hardware, though by now there's even less of it around to worry about. In reality, every new version of any OS will always run better on newer hardware, since that's what it's designed to take advantage of. Vista was only a bit worse at this than previous versions, but the number of old PCs, often of not very good quality, had never been anywhere near as large in the past.

    Over all Windows Vista was more of a PR nightmare than a real technical issue. A perfect example of this is UAC, which most have mis-understood from the beginning as a 'security feature'. In reality it's a 'nag box' intended to shame the software developer community into writing code that doesn't require Administrator priviledge for everyday operation, as already stated. If you are receiving lots of these pop-ups in everyday use, just get rid of the offending software and they'll go away, otherwise they should only occur when you are managing something that requires Administrator access. I totally agree with this process, since as all of you have stated, people are fundamentally lazy and just want the problems to be solved. This is what Microsoft is trying to get the software community to do, by using their own customers annoyance to get them to fix the bad coding. Unfortunately this seems to be the only way to get this through some developers heads.

    Once the programs are working properly, the new default Standard user account will be usable by most, allowing the real improvement in security that this allows. I've been operating my sister's PC this way since it was bought in 2002, with Limited accounts on Windows XP before the current Vista Standard accounts. My nephew doesn't like it, but it's kept several viruses and worse from successfully attacking the PC and insured that my weekends spent there are only to perform upgrades of still badly written software like iTunes/QuickTime or Adobe products, all of which come originally from the Apple world by the way. The Vista, Office, OneCare AV and most other software is always automatically updated and has never been a problem during the entire life of the PC.

    As usual Microsoft is right, it's just taking years for the developer and user communities to actually do what they've complained at Microsoft for several years about, provide real security in their products and actually use it. I've been doing this successfully since shortly after Windows 2000 released, I'm not really sure when the rest of the world is going to catch up.

    All of this does actually result from the fact that early versions of Windows were designed without any real security, but these systems were used in standalone situations without any networking, let alone an Internet attachment.

    Bitman

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    Adviser Team AplusWebMaster's Avatar
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    Wink April fools...

    Getting back to the April 1st thing, F-secure had a good write-up about it today:
    - http://www.f-secure.com/weblog/archives/00001636.html
    March 26, 2009

    ... but the ESET blog had a better quote a few days ago:
    - http://www.eset.com/threat-center/blog/?p=822
    March 24, 2009 - "...Before you hyperventilate over this one though, remember, there are thousands of other threats out there as well. If you are taking the right steps to keep your computer secure, then Conficker.C will be no riskier to you than the other threats you have not been getting infected with..."

    My AV is currently "Scanning for 1327400 virus strains and unwanted programs...". Conficker is just a few of them.

    .
    The machine has no brain.
    ......... Use your own.
    Browser check for updates here.
    YOU need to defend against -all- vulnerabilities.
    Hacks only need to find -1- to get in...
    .

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    Senior Member Matt's Avatar
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    Thank you for these links.
    Best regards - Beste Grüße,

    Matt

  10. #10
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    Hmm, yes this thread did seem to drift to the second portion of the question, so here's my contribution to the first part.

    Protect yourself from the Conficker computer worm
    http://www.microsoft.com/protect/com...conficker.mspx

    Bitman

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