Ways to Know You've Been Hacked
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http://www.csoonline.com/article/742575/11-sure-signs-you-39-ve-been-hacked
Most are pretty obvious but the list is good.
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@scottalanmiller
Porn popups that won't close, website defaced, fake FBI warnings.........lol that is a pretty good list!
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hey, not all porn popups are viruses!
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@Hubtech said:
hey, not all porn popups are viruses!
Or even most.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Hubtech said:
hey, not all porn popups are viruses!
Or even most.
This is a huge myth. Porn makes money, a lot of it. They are not going to infect your PC, that would hurt their balance sheet. IT is and always has been simply "the bad guys" taking advantage of whoever would seem most vulnerable. For a while it was people want "free" porn that were easy targets and that is how the myth started, but that moved on a long time ago.
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thanks for sharing. @scottalanmiller I remove the Internet connection in our Production area to avoid our user to browse the internet during working hours.Am i bad?
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@Joyfano said:
thanks for sharing. @scottalanmiller I remove the Internet connection in our Production area to avoid our user to browse the internet during working hours.Am i bad?
Sounds like they are
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@Joyfano
@Joyfano said:
....Am i bad?
Prudent in interest of the company's productivity is more accurate.
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@RoguePacket said:
@Joyfano said:
....Am i bad?
Prudent in interest of the company's productivity is more accurate.
Hmm Yes -
Thanks for the link. A lot of good items on the list.
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Article says: "No. 1 recommendation is to completely restore your system to a known good state before proceeding. In the early days, this meant formatting the computer and restoring all programs and data. Today, depending on your operating system, it might simply mean clicking on a Restore button."
I remember that in the XP & Vista era, system restore's would have instances of the malware or virus in them. So we stopped using system restore as a start point. Does anyone one else trust the system restore?
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Except now, the virus writers know how to hide things in the recovery partitions
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@JaredBusch said:
Except now, the virus writers know how to hide things in the recovery partitions
Yes, restores should be done from a clean, remote source.
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Glad I wasn't the only one pointing this out. I have had local techs tell me my was was overkill.
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My way = guaranteed fix was to reinstall OS, update, add security measures and try to get all users to run as standard users.
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@technobabble said:
Glad I wasn't the only one pointing this out. I have had local techs tell me my was was overkill.
Remote source can mean just a read-only CD or DVD too. Doesn't have to mean big infrastructure for imaging. Depends on size.
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@technobabble said:
Does anyone one else trust the system restore?
At the office we disable system restore via group policy because it never seemed to actually fix anything and tied up valuable storage space (we use SSDs on all our laptops, so sometimes space is a bit tight.) Also we have a couple users who know enough to be dangerous and would run system restore a dozen times to try and fix their own problems, and in a few cases it caused problems for some of our applications.
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@jasonh said:
@technobabble said:
Does anyone one else trust the system restore?
At the office we disable system restore via group policy because it never seemed to actually fix anything and tied up valuable storage space (we use SSDs on all our laptops, so sometimes space is a bit tight.) Also we have a couple users who know enough to be dangerous and would run system restore a dozen times to try and fix their own problems, and in a few cases it caused problems for some of our applications.
Agreed, user-initiated system restores are almost always a disaster eventually. I've seen a lot of shops try this and never hear good results. It sounds good, but people get crazy. They treat it like rebooting.
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I've used it once or twice with success, more often than no it solves nothing.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@jasonh said:
@technobabble said:
Does anyone one else trust the system restore?
At the office we disable system restore via group policy because it never seemed to actually fix anything and tied up valuable storage space (we use SSDs on all our laptops, so sometimes space is a bit tight.) Also we have a couple users who know enough to be dangerous and would run system restore a dozen times to try and fix their own problems, and in a few cases it caused problems for some of our applications.
Agreed, user-initiated system restores are almost always a disaster eventually. I've seen a lot of shops try this and never hear good results. It sounds good, but people get crazy. They treat it like rebooting.
To me it also seems like the restores are getting longer and longer and sometimes once you start one you can't stop it.