MESSAGE
DATE | 2004-06-12 |
FROM | Mike Richardson - NYLXS PRESIDENT
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SUBJECT | Subject: [hangout] [Fwd: The proper MSFT security procedure?] (fwd)
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---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Sat, 12 Jun 2004 11:23:10 -0400 From: Michael L. Richardson To: michael-nylxs Subject: [Fwd: The proper MSFT security procedure?]
-----Forwarded Message----- > From: Michael L. Richardson > To: nylxs > Subject: The proper MSFT security procedure? > Date: Fri, 11 Jun 2004 23:35:16 -0400 > > Guys this is from messages on the wwwac list. They are all on the same > topic. 12 messages in all. > Messsage 1. > My mom, who lives 200 miles away, and, after 7 years of using a > computer to "do eBay" still can't make a new folder without me there > to guide her, has come under a full assault of of Spyware and AdWare > as a result (she claims) of clicking on a "link in Google" - but > after I pressed her on it, she told me that she DID click on an > attachment that "seemed like it was from an eBay person" > > Her computer started running all sorts of stuff, ignoring her > keystrokes as more and more stuff piled up the desktop. Well, I spent > an hour on the phone with her trying to explain to her how to get and > run adware removers, and ultimately, she lost control of the > computer, to the point where literally hundreds of windows were > popping up and all that. > > She has Norton System Works, fully updated, it didn't find anything. > We ran Bazooka, and that found about 25 spy programs, but she > couldn't figure out how to use Bazooka to delete them. > > I need a one-click solution she can buy at a local store. > > I told here to pull the plug on the computer and NOT to start it up > again until I tell her what to do. > > What do I tell her to do? > > message2. > I had a client like this, and all the adware was disabling and > reconfiguring lavasoft, or not allowing it to be installed. I was also > worried that Norton AV had been warped, too. Finally I just installed > everything from scratch. > > The good thing is that a lot of casual users only store bookmarks on > their computers (which makes huge hard drives hilarious). So if she can > just attach her bookmark file to an e-mail in her yahoo mail account, > you can nuke the computer. > > For users like her I think it would be best to set up the system once > and make an image of it, and make it easy to restore back to that image. > > Of course, if she's running XP she could go back to a previous system > state, which might do much of the same thing. > > Either way, I usually don't trust a machine once it's been compromised. > message 3.Erg... > OK, here's a recap: > > 1. She can't use the Internet - no downloads > 2. I don't run Windows, and can't make a boot disk for Windows. > 3. What can she get at say Staples or Office Max or one of those and > buy, right now? > No downloads. > message 4. > Without being able to use the internet, she's SOL as far as doing it > herself or you doing it. Even if you were able to buy a boxed > anti-spyware program, it's definitions would need to be updated online, > like an antivirus program. If you can download one, like adaware, burn > it to CD with its latest definitions, and then install it, that might > work. > > Call in a professional and/or reinstall the box from scratch. > message 5. > I know this sounds crazy, but you CAN buy a Linux distro at > Staples or Office Max. Chances are very good that she can > just shove the CD into her computer and keep clicking "Yes" > and wind up with a default installation that would suit her > needs. This is the only thing I can think of that meets the > above three requirements assuming that her Windows > installation is hosed. > or... > How I handled a similar situation - My mom is on a Mac now, > and my my sister handles any support issues... > > --------------howie > > message 6.So I called her with the sage advice of this list, which I can > summarize as follows: > > "The computer is F....ked, you have to reload Windows and start over" > > Which, apparently the same advice her computer geek neighbor gave her > before I called. > > She has no idea where the install disks are, and remember, this is a > person who still can't quite get the idea of a "directory structure" > and for whom "Cut and Paste" requires a consultation with the > notebook she keeps by the computer. > > I told her it would take a few hours - at best - to recover the > system, and another few hours to re-install all the software she had > on there, and her eBay pictures were basically gone. > > Guess what she did? > > She tossed her 1.something gig processor, 256meg, 40 gig hard drive > Windows PC in the trash and is heading out to buy a Mac. > > There IS a God. > message 7. > I dug up this article from an April 11 column in Newsday that might > help you and your Mom now and/or in the future: > > E-mailbag brings a Linux love letter > Lou Dolinar > > April 11, 2004 > > Time to catch up with e-mail this week. After our last four columns > on Linux, operating systems are on the front burner, along with some > general interest questions. > > The Knoppix version of Linux, which reader Howard Bates alerted me to > a while back, seems to be stirring the most interest. Knoppix, as > you'll recall, fits on a single CD, boots, detects hardware, and > installs itself without ever touching your hard drive. To the extent > you can make a case for desktop Linux, you can make a particularly > good case for Knoppix. I've heard from perhaps a half-dozen readers > who have tried it. The following e-mail, from an anonymous reader, is > typical: > > "I love Knoppix . . . I just take the CD with my personal settings > also burned onto the disk and away I go. No longer do I have to deal > with how someone else sets up their PC. Plop it and presto! > > "My mom got tired of her Windows PC and all the problems she has with > it. Too slow, error messages everywhere, no one available to fix it > (she lives far away from me). She is 74 so is not interested in > upgrading to XP, buying a new machine, or anything else that involves > money or learning the ins and outs of a new system. She just wants > something to use to read her mail off Yahoo and browse the Internet. > > "So I sent her a Knoppix disk. She loves it. No matter what she does, > she can just restart the machine if she thinks she messed something > up (she never does mess it up but is concerned that if she does no > one will be around to fix the problem). I love my mom, but I also > love the fact that conversations no longer begin with 'Can you help > me with my PC - I think I messed things up again.' She now spends > more time messing around with her computer since she knows no matter > what she does - the damage is never permanent. > > "So, I'm sending a disk to my brother so his kids can hammer away at > their PCs without him needing to reinstall the software once a month > after they totally nuke the system in their desire to remove, > install, 'fix' or otherwise improve what they believe can always be > fixed by Dad." > message 8.Have her get it to you. Weren't you soliciting donations a > while back for > some project? > > Why toss a perfectly good Linux machine? Just because it once ran an > MSFT > environment? That's the worse type of profiling. > > - Andrew > message 9. > When she does the same with the Mac, could I please have it? > message 10.> Kim B. Foglia wrote: > > > > > >>"I love Knoppix . . . I just take the CD with my personal settings > >>also burned onto the disk and away I go. No longer do I have to deal > >>with how someone else sets up their PC. Plop it and presto! > > > > > > I've heard of Knoppix, of course, but *this* idea never occurred to > me. How > > easy is it to create a login, profile, etc. and then create a new CD? > > > > - Andrew > > You can actually use a CD and have a USB key handy to save your > bookmarks, etc on. (it's setup as your home directory in Linux) > > To set this up, boot Knoppix on a PC and drop the USB key in. Run the > command in the "K" (start) menu to create a persistent home directory > and follow along. When done, you can type "knoppix home=scan" at the > first prompt when booting to automatically use it. Full details are > here: > > http://www.knoppix-std.org/docs/crypto_home.html > > I'm sure there's a Knoppix CD out there that someone set up to scan for > home automatically, so you can avoid typing the scan command in. > > The big advantage to this, besides the fact that you can't really screw > it up, is that as long as you have your Knoppix CD and key with you... > you have your desktop with you (bookmarks, few files, mail setup, etc) > message 11.To all who asked about the unfortunate ad-soaked computer > that was > uncermoniously ejected from the house. > > My Dad is now involved. According to his latest report on my Mom's > computer spaz-out, the computer was, quite literally, THROWN out of > the house, onto the patio in the back, near the trash cans, where it > has been rained on for the last hour, as he called me to ask if I > still wanted it despite having suffered dramatic and sudden > de-acceleration and extensive exposure to rain and such owning to the > fact that it landed upside-down in a puddle. Given that I already > have enough broken pentium systems to last a lifetime, I declined. > > I told him to get her a nice 20" screen iMac. > message 12.Martin T. Focazio wrote: > > > According to his latest report on my Mom's > > computer spaz-out, the computer was, quite literally, THROWN out of > > the house, onto the patio in the back, near the trash cans, where it > > has been rained on for the last hour, > > You lied! > > You wrote that your Mom was computer-illiterate. How then can you > explain > her knowledge of the proper MSFT security procedure? > > - Andrew > > > > > > >
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