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June 24, 2008

New version of All In One Keylogger added

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July 03, 2008

Information Security Management: The Basics

Industry View: Web Application Security Today - Are We All Insane?

Ignore Malware? Some Leaders Imply Yes

Chinese bloggers evade great firewall

HMRC blunder leads to further private data leak

Reports reveal poor security practices behind data losses

Thieves steal millions from Citibank customers

Trojans stop play for web gamers

Google open sources RatProxy security tool

IBM Develops Audio-masking Technology

ATO admits callers are 'chopped off'

E-security review to probe broadband network

Stolen: Google's employee records

Microsoft trumpets security additions in upcoming IE8

Mozilla patches 13 bugs in Firefox 2

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DISCLAIMER: Logging other people's keystrokes or breaking into other people's computer without their permission can be considered illegal by the courts of many countries. The monitoring software reviewed here is ONLY for authorized system administrators and/or owners of computers. We assume no liability and are not responsible for any misuse or damage caused by the keylogging software. The end user of this software is obliged to obey all applicable local, state, federal and other laws in his country of residence.

May 13, 2008

Microsoft faults OEMs for some XP SP3 endless reboots

Microsoft Corp. has blamed computer makers for some of the problems users have encountered after updating to Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3), according to a company support document.

The document also showed that the "endless reboot" problem some users have reported after installing XP SP3 was neither unanticipated or new; Microsoft updated the document on the same day it released the service pack, and the company indicated that the same thing happened nearly four years ago when it rolled out Windows XP SP2.

On Monday, Microsoft confirmed the document's conclusions. "Microsoft is aware of a reboot issue experienced by some users who have attempted to install Windows XP SP3," a company spokeswoman said in an e-mail. "Microsoft issued guidance to OEMs advising them to only load Windows XP images onto like hardware in 2004."

Knowledge Base Article 888372, last updated May 6, spelled out an error message that stops a PC's boot process -- and, depending on the machine's settings, may make it repeatedly reboot -- after installing SP3. The fault, said the Microsoft document, is in the Windows XP image originally installed on the PC by the computer manufacturer.

"The problem may occur if the original Windows XP Service Pack 1 (SP1) Sysprep image is created on an Intel processor-based computer and if the Sysprep image is then deployed on a non-Intel processor-based computer," said Microsoft.

"Under this configuration, after the computer is upgraded to Windows XP SP2 or SP3, the Intel processor driver (Intelppm.sys) may try to load because an orphaned registry key remains from the original Sysprep image," the document continued. "This issue may also occur if the original Windows XP SP2 or Windows XP SP3 Sysprep image is created on an Intel processor-based computer and if it is then deployed onto a non-Intel processor-based computer. Again, the Intel processor driver (Intelppm.sys) may try to load because an orphaned registry key remains from the original Sysprep image."

A day after Microsoft added XP SP3 to Windows Update, users whose machines use processors from Advanced Micro Devices Inc., reported that they were rebooting endlessly. Many of them said that the crippled systems were from Hewlett-Packard Co.

"I too have an HP Pavilion with an AMD Athelon [sic] processor," said a user identified as "jrednasnh" in a message posted Saturday to a Microsoft support forum. "I find it discouraging that HP may be partially at fault and did not attempt to notify us AMD customers, nor attempt to fix the issue."

Jesper Johansson, a former program manager for security policy at Microsoft and currently an MVP (Microsoft Most Valuable Professional), worked with others to identify some of the reboot issues as involving PCs running AMD CPUs. Johansson, who said one of his HP PCs repeatedly rebooted after installing XP SP3, traded accounts with several other users on the newsgroup and summarized the results on his blog.

"The problem is that HP, and possibly other [manufacturers], deploy the same image to Intel-based desktops that they do to AMD-based desktops," Johansson said. "Microsoft points out in a Knowledge Base article that installing both drivers on the same computer is an unsupported configuration, putting the blame on the [manufacturer] that deploys the image. The article in question was written when the same problem occurred after installing Service Pack 2 for Windows XP." Microsoft unveiled XP SP2 in August 2004.

According to Johansson, only HP desktop models are affected. "It also appears that this is unique to their desktop image, and any HP AMD-based laptops are unaffected by the problem," he said.

As Johansson mentioned, Microsoft has dubbed the practice "unsupported" in KB888372. "We do not support using Sysprep to install an operating system from an image if the image was created by using a computer that has a different processor," said Microsoft. "For example, you cannot create a Sysprep image on a computer that has an Intel processor and deploy the image to a computer that has an AMD processor."

KB888372 instructed users how to modify the Windows registry to disable the errant Intel driver, assuming users could regain control of their PCs long enough to boot into Safe mode.

The company has also listed several other scenarios that [resellers] should avoid in another support document.

As of 1:30 p.m. EDT Monday, Hewlett-Packard had not responded to questions posed Sunday about how it built the Windows XP images on its AMD-powered PCs.


Source: ComputerWorld




All news for July 03, 2008:
14:06Information Security Management: The Basics
14:06Industry View: Web Application Security Today - Are We All Insane?
14:04Ignore Malware? Some Leaders Imply Yes
14:02Chinese bloggers evade great firewall
13:01HMRC blunder leads to further private data leak
12:54Reports reveal poor security practices behind data losses
12:53Thieves steal millions from Citibank customers
12:51Trojans stop play for web gamers
12:50Google open sources RatProxy security tool
12:48IBM Develops Audio-masking Technology
12:40ATO admits callers are 'chopped off'
12:39E-security review to probe broadband network
12:37Stolen: Google's employee records
12:33Microsoft trumpets security additions in upcoming IE8
12:32Mozilla patches 13 bugs in Firefox 2

All news for July 02, 2008:
16:50Start-up nexTier debuts data-leak prevention appliance
16:49ACLU, EFF sue US gov't over mobile phone tracking
16:47UK scientists demo graphic passwords
16:46SecureWorks unmasks the Coreflood Trojan
16:45Web threats hit 12-month high
16:43Malware growth slowing, say experts
16:42World of Warcraft Trojan spreads from Asia
16:42Hackers hit Sony PS3 website
16:41SMEs failing at IT security
16:37Hacking Tools: A New Version of BackTrack Helps Ethical Hackers
16:36Hands On: 12 Quick Hacks for Firefox 3
16:35Swedish Data Inspection Protects Messy Apartment Dwellers
16:06DIAC security threatened by flood of contractors
16:02Lords questions gov't over web-data retention laws
16:00Barclays gives online users free Kaspersky software
16:00Report: Outdated browsers put 637m users at risk
15:57Trojan lurks, waiting to steal admin passwords
15:57Unstructured data at risk in most firms, survey finds
15:55Microsoft scrutinizes WSUS patch snafu
15:53Apple OS update fixes Adobe corruption bug



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