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Keyword: computer

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  • Cheektowaga teen accused of computer crimes

    02/19/2005 8:14:16 AM PST · by holymoly · 11 replies · 791+ views
    Buffalo News
    A Cheektowaga teenager, a whiz kid on the computer, has been arrested in Los Angeles and accused of bombarding Internet users with more than a million spam e-mails. Not only is the 18-year-old accused of computer hacking and violating federal spam laws, but he allegedly threatened to wreak more havoc on a California Internet company if it didn't give him exclusive marketing rights to its customers, federal authorities said. Anthony Greco, a former Erie Community College student, is accused of creating thousands of accounts on MySpace.com, an online meeting place, and using them to send about 1.5 million unsolicited commercial...
  • Norton Antivirus detects but doesn't remove adware (?)

    02/18/2005 4:11:26 AM PST · by rudy45 · 16 replies · 1,806+ views
    self
    I have the latest definitions. The scan found these files: - C:\WINDOWS\remover.dll - C:\WINDOWS\nxstinst.exe - C:\WINDOWS\Downloaded Program Files\MediaTicketsInstaller.ocx However, Norton doesn't give me the option to delete or quarantine these files. I see the first two files in Windows Explorer, but not the last one. Can/should I just delete the first two? What about the third? Thanks. I have run Spybot Search and Destroy, but these same files still appear. Any help is appreciated.
  • The Web: Dealing with cyber-crime

    02/16/2005 10:56:48 AM PST · by kerrywearsbotox · 191+ views
    United Press International ^ | February 16, 2005 | Gene Koprowski
    CHICAGO -- Leading technology executives are pressing the White House to create a commission on cyber-crime, hoping the panel can develop solutions to vexing computer problems, such as spam and identity theft, but skeptics told UPI's The Web if developers would build better and more secure products, the problems of cyber-security would become less severe. Executives from Adobe Systems, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, IBM and Microsoft, among others, last week met with White House science adviser John Marburger, as well as with officials from the Office of Management and Budget and the U.S. Department of Commerce to discuss the subject. "We believe...
  • *Vanity* Any Freeper help with Wireless Networks? *Vanity*

    02/13/2005 6:23:26 PM PST · by birbear · 41 replies · 1,113+ views
    me | 2/13/05 | Me
    I'm sorry to distrub your bandwidth, but I'm looking for a helpful Freeper. This weekend I tried to install a wireless network at my parents house. I purchased a Linksys wireless router, and a Linksys PCI Wireless Network card. Setting up the wireless router on my parent's PC was a breeze... I followed the step by step directions and it went on like a champ. The PCI card also wasn't much trouble. I found a slot in my Dell, and it configured itself. (Oh, both systems are running XP Home.) Okay so the PCI card found the router, and it...
  • With New CEO, HP May Face Major Shift

    02/13/2005 7:14:46 AM PST · by drt1 · 11 replies · 576+ views
    AP ^ | 02/13/2005 | MATTHEW FORDAHL
    SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - The next chief executive of Hewlett-Packard Co. will need to decide whether to stick with Carly Fiorina's two-pronged strategy of trying to beat the company's rivals in what they do best _ IBM in premium computers and services, Dell in business and consumer systems. Or the Silicon Valley icon could effectively concede defeat in its current multifront war and break itself apart into separate businesses that can focus their employees, management and research resources on specific markets. After showing Fiorina the door this week, HP's board made its near-term intent clear: It wants to keep...
  • Silicon Insider: R.I.P. Microsoft?

    02/11/2005 5:41:56 AM PST · by ShadowAce · 190 replies · 3,867+ views
    ABC News ^ | 10 February 2005 | MICHAEL S. MALONE
    Feb. 10, 2005 - Is Microsoft dying? Business reporters -- like, I suspect analysts and venture capitalists -- develop over time a set of diagnostic tools for analyzing the relative health of companies we encounter. This bag of tricks is mostly subjective, some of it no doubt unconscious, and we constantly test it against experience, most of it bad. That is, every time we get suckered into writing an upbeat story about an evil, incompetent or doomed company, we swear we will never make that mistake again -- then we scrutinize where we went wrong and what warning signals we...
  • R.I.P Microsoft?

    02/11/2005 8:58:56 PM PST · by Peelod · 64 replies · 1,806+ views
    ABCnews ^ | 2.10.05 | MICHAEL S. MALONE
    ... The health of established firms, especially great ones, is more difficult to diagnose. The balance sheet can give some clues, but, because it captures the recent past rather than the near future, it can fool you. Most veteran reporters look at more subtle clues, like the comings and goings of key employees, slippage in the release dates of new products (or missing features), and subtle shifts in the tone of company news releases, advertisements and executive speeches. But most of all, at least for me, there is the smell test: the faintest whiff of decay that comes from dying...
  • MSN Logged on For Attacks

    02/11/2005 12:32:54 PM PST · by zeugma · 15 replies · 663+ views
    TechTree ^ | February 11, 2005 | Techtree News Staff
    Core Security Technologies, has published a vulnerability in Microsoft's MSN Messenger, an instant messaging program currently used by over 130 million people worldwide. A patch for this had been issued on Tuesday. Core Security is a Boston, U.S.-based information security solutions company. Core researchers discovered that by selecting a specially-crafted graphic as the user's display picture in MSN Messenger, an attacker could trigger a buffer overflow vulnerability on the chat partner's computer and covertly take over machines running instant messaging software. The attack would travel through the established chat session and would pass unnoticed by firewalls, network intrusion detection systems...
  • New 'Supercomputer on a Chip' Makes Debut

    02/07/2005 1:24:08 PM PST · by Next_Time_NJ · 17 replies · 903+ views
    Dubbed a "supercomputer on a chip," the Cell microprocessor has until now been long on ambition but short on specifics. At a technical conference in San Francisco, the three electronics giants described a chip that could provide ten times the performance of the latest PC chips and churn through many tasks at once. Aimed squarely at the "digital home" market highly sought-after by Intel Corp. (Nasdaq:INTC - news), the Cell initiative, which has been in development since 2001, is viewed by some as a formidable, if fledgling, competitor to the world's largest chip maker. While IBM showed off prototypes of...
  • Need advice on a handheld PC

    02/06/2005 10:37:07 AM PST · by taxcontrol · 33 replies · 1,158+ views
    None ^ | 06 Feb 2005 | self
    Folks, I'm tired of lugging my laptop around and having to go to the doc for pain in my shoulder and back. I'm thinking about a handheld PC to do most of my "road work". I need recommendations and advice as this is a new area for me. Educational URLs are most appreciated. Requirements: (I MUST have these, without them the solution would not be viable) Sync with Lotus Notes WiFi and 56k modem capable Able to handle large complex spreadsheets Able to handle large PowerPoint files Able to browse the web VGA output for presentations (plug into projector @...
  • Why Does Windows Still Suck? Why do PC users put up with so many viruses and worms?...

    02/04/2005 7:54:13 AM PST · by SmithL · 283 replies · 4,685+ views
    San Francisco Chronicle ^ | 2/4/5 | Mark Morford
    So about a year ago, the SO finally upgraded her Net connection to DSL, carefully installed the Yahoo! DSL software into her creaky Sony Vaio PC laptop and ran through all the checks and install verifications and appropriate nasty disclaimers. And all seemed to go smoothly and reasonably enough considering it was a Windows PC and therefore nothing was really all that smooth or reasonable or elegant, but whatever. She just wanted to get online. Should be easy as 1-2-3, claimed the Yahoo! guide. Painless as tying your shoe, said the phone company. She got online all right. The DSL...
  • The Worm That Gurned – Email Virus Pulls A Funny Face, Sophos Reports

    02/01/2005 7:12:07 PM PST · by holymoly · 1 replies · 478+ views
    Computerworld ^ | 02/02/2005 | N/A
    Virus experts at Sophos have reported that a new worm demonstrates the ancient British art of gurning, the tradition of pulling a funny or scary face, as it infects computers. The Wurmark-F worm spreads via email, pretending to be from addresses such as easy_lay666@lovenet.com, sexy_guy88@aol.com and sexy_lil_thing@no-ip.com. Emails can have a variety of characteristics including: Subject: Hhahahah lol!!!! Message body: i found this on my computer from ages ago download it and see if you can remember it lol i was lauging like mad when i saw it! :D email me back haha... Subject: Rate My Pic....... Message body: Hi...
  • Spyware Found On Kentucky Sheriff's Office Computers

    02/01/2005 12:37:03 PM PST · by holymoly · 33 replies · 3,728+ views
    Officer.com ^ | February 1st, 2005 | Associated Press
    OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) -- Someone placed surveillance software on sheriff's office computers, apparently enabling unauthorized access to sensitive information about prisoner movements, confidential homeland security updates and private personnel files. Sheriff John Whetsel said Monday Spector Pro, monitoring software designed to track every detail of computer activity, was found last week on three computers in his office. Whetsel said he discovered the software on his own computer when he ran a spyware detector out of curiosity. A scan of all sheriff's computers also found the application on the computers of Maj. John Waldenville and Capt. David Baisden. Waldenville leads the...
  • Government Computer Blunders Are Common

    01/30/2005 10:29:32 PM PST · by anymouse · 3 replies · 298+ views
    Associated Press ^ | Jan 29, 2005 | TED BRIDIS
    The FBI's failure to roll out an expanded computer system that would help agents investigate criminals and terrorists is the latest in a series of costly technology blunders by government over more than a decade. Experts blame poor planning, rapid industry advances and the massive scope of some complex projects whose price tags can run into billions of dollars at U.S. agencies with tens of thousands of employees. "There are very few success stories," said Paul Brubaker, former deputy chief information officer at the Pentagon. "Failures are very common, and they've been common for a long time." The FBI said...
  • Woman Accused In Unusual Computer Crime

    01/29/2005 2:02:19 PM PST · by Dallas59 · 41 replies · 1,649+ views
    WCAX TV ^ | 1/29/05 | WCAX TV
    Burlington woman has became the first in Vermont to be charged with a bizarre computer crime. The alleged high-tech caper involved identity theft, harassment, and an attempt to make a co-worker look like a lunatic,according to police. "Yeah, I think, you know, people thought I was off my rocker for a while," said Jeanne Landau, the alleged victim. She says she was shocked and scared last fall when friends accused her of sending threatening e-mails to a co-worker.
  • Prosecutors seek 37-month term in Internet worm case

    01/26/2005 7:59:27 AM PST · by Rakkasan1 · 6 replies · 388+ views
    mpls star and sickle ^ | 1-26-05 | paul levy
    Jeffrey Lee Parson, the Hopkins teenager who unleashed an Internet worm that infected an estimated 48,000 computers and caused more than $1 million in damage, should be sentenced to 37 months in prison, according to a formal recommendation made by federal prosecutors Tuesday. Parson's sentencing is scheduled for Friday in U.S. District Court in Seattle. Parson, 19, who was arrested during his senior year at Hopkins High School, pleaded guilty in August to releasing the widely publicized Internet virus. "Parson's worm was not an aberrant moment in a young person's life, but instead was just the latest in a string...
  • xp problem

    01/15/2005 8:35:54 PM PST · by ken21 · 24 replies · 398+ views
    january 15, 2005 | moi
    i just got this computer. xp. i'm the only one using it, so i'm the administrator. problem--i want to copy an essay to my cd, but xp won't let me, saying that i don't have access to the d folder, ask my administrator. i am the administrator! there must be a simple fix. thanks
  • World Community Grid

    01/12/2005 4:02:22 PM PST · by tantiboh · 6 replies · 290+ views
    ibm.com ^ | 16 Nov 2004 | IBM
    ARMONK, N.Y., November 16, 2004— IBM, along with representatives of the world's leading science, education and philanthropic organizations, today launched World Community Grid, a global humanitarian effort that applies the unused computing power of individual and business computers to help address the world's most difficult health and societal problems. World Community Grid will harness the vast and unused computational power of the world's computers and direct it at research designed to help unlock genetic codes that underlie diseases like AIDS and HIV, Alzheimer's and cancer, improve forecasting of natural disasters and support studies that can protect the world's food and...
  • Worm spreads Happy Nude Year greeting

    01/12/2005 9:21:57 AM PST · by holymoly · 13 replies · 1,293+ views
    ZDNet UK ^ | January 11, 2005 | Dan Ilett
    An emailed New Year photo of naked people contains a nasty shock - a worm that will turn off security protection and harvest email addresses Antivirus companies have unearthed a computer worm that hides behind an image of naked people. According to antivirus company Sophos, the naughty New Year photo message contains a mass-mailing worm, dubbed Wurmark-D, that is programmed to disable security software on host computers and send itself to email addresses stored there. "Once activated, this worm will harvest your computer hunting for other email addresses to send itself to and try and turn off antivirus software," said...
  • Help with computer (vanity but at least I put it in chat)

    01/09/2005 11:12:29 AM PST · by not_apathetic_anymore · 48 replies · 488+ views
    me | 1/9/05 | me
    I've done something and don't know how to reset it. I'm sure the answer is very simple but it's eluding me. One day last week I noticed that when I begin a new email message it types in light yellow (so pale it cant be read) type. Each time I have to go up to the Big A(font color) and select automatic. Then it'll type in black What did I do and how can I set it go back and default it to type in black automatically? Thanks