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related pastes to tag 'security'
- 2090222 - Eset - [October 15,2011]Fresh no: smart key serial security eset
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- Eset - [October 15,2011]Fresh nod32 keys
- ESET Smart Security
- Antivirus | Antispyware | Firewall | Antispam | Parental Control
- Eset Smart Security Live Installer + Serial Keys Updated today [October 15,2011]
- Download
- 2052616 - killuminati little bros: network security issues
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- Ok, I'm going to renew my security issues on my PC.
- PeerBlock + BLM + my selection on blacklists...
- you can find two sources for black lists, just unite the corresponding (LVL1+LVL1)
- Spyware Defender (FREE) Agnitum Outpost
- Utilu installer for firefox: old for no images, no java. newest for pr0nwar3z.
- 2034355 - Bugfix for AUTN bug in radio fir: security baseband
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- LOAD:00B60808 iei_autn_found ; CODE XREF: perform_gsm_3gpp_auth+22j
- LOAD:00B60808 LDR R0, [R1,R4] ; point R0 to IE
- LOAD:00B6080A MOVS R2, #0x10 ; maximum allowed length for AUTN data
- LOAD:00B6080C LDRB R0, [R0,#1] ; load length of AUTN IE into R0
- LOAD:00B6080E CMP R0, #0x10 ; check whether AUTN IE is too large
- LOAD:00B60810 BCS autn_len_ok ; only branch to mempcy() if R0 < 16
- LOAD:00B60812 MOVS R2, R0 ; it's too large, hence truncate: set R2 to 16
- LOAD:00B60814
- 1980904 - Security Awareness: security awareness
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- http://huntleyproject.blogspot.com/
- 1980902 - Security Awareness: security awareness
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- http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_SwADy1COHcE/TNBrh6YkMlI/AAAAAAAAAA0/ezAfU5dh4HM/s320/autotype.png
- 1930593 - ScorecardResearch.com SSL login : login ssl security livejournal scorecardresearch
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- sb.scorecardresearch.com
- Issuer:
- UTN-USERFirst-Hardware, The USERTRUST Network, http://www.usertrust.com, US, UT, Salt Lake City
- Subject:
- *.scorecardresearch.com, TMRG, OSE, Akamai Wildcard SSL, scorecardresearch.com, US, VIRGINIA, Reston
- 1881590 - Future of the Internet: war internet security revolution censorship freedom trust
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- Based on the things I've been seeing lately, I foresee potentially grim things in the future of the Internet. Right now it's a decentralized, unmoderated network where we can do as we please, and it seems a lot of corporations and governments don't like that.
- One by one, more and more countries are adopting ever-stricter laws and eventually beginning to censor all connections. Sweden, USA, Australia, now even Canada is moving this way. China and many middle-eastern countries have already been there for quite some time. Soon there will be few if any uncensored feeds, and DMCA-style nonsense anywhere you go.
- At first, you won't know for sure. You won't just see some "sorry, access blocked" page. Maybe certain sites suddenly just seem to be down from your end, packets start getting lost, connections dropped, information mysteriously missing in a fashion that conveniently happens not to be terribly noticeable. And it's not all just about blocking access, either. Maybe someone starts adding tracking information into those files you're downloading. A serial number identifying who got what from where, so they can then see where it ends up.
- The war is just getting started. There are those who want to make privacy and anonymity a thing of the past; those who want to police the web, enforcing horridly outdated copyright, censorship, and any other laws they feel like making up, with outrageously large lawsuits as their weaponry; those who want to end network neutrality and charge through the nose for access on a per-site basis. They are separate entities, but they are union; the axis of evil in World-Wide-Web War I, all working together to achieve their own goals. And with such "convenient" features as the unified logins mentioned in this very thread, they are making steady progress.
- It's hard to say exactly what things would be like if we lost, but it's easy to tell they wouldn't be pretty. Think of having your real identity attached to every single thing you do online. Thought Facebook stalking by potential employers was bad? Wait until they can see [i]everything[/i] and you can do nothing to remove it. Think of paying not for a month's connection but for each page request - oh and you'll have to say goodbye to all those protocols that don't jive with such a system, especially the encrypted ones; BitTorrent, SSH, VNC, maybe even IRC, certainly anything custom or obscure that might be letting you disguise or hide your activities - after all, they can't bill properly for it if they can't see exactly what it is.
- 1812719 - /etc/init.d/firewall linux security firewall
- preview unavailable
- 1799394 - auth.php: php security wip authentication
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- /*
- | -------------------------------------------------------------------
- | Authentication Library
- | -------------------------------------------------------------------
- |
- | A simple user authentication class. It handles user authentication,
- | nothing less, nothing more. For permissions, use a separate
- 1744375 - p4a.subtyper permissions: permission plone security plone4artists p4a.subtyper
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- omnium:p4a.subtyper-1.1.1-py2.4.egg centrimadmin$ sudo grep -R secur .
- ./p4a/subtyper/contentmenu/browser.py: security = AccessControl.SecurityInfo.ClassSecurityInfo()
- ./p4a/subtyper/contentmenu/browser.py: security.declarePublic('macros')
- Binary file ./p4a/subtyper/contentmenu/browser.pyc matches
- Binary file ./p4a/subtyper/contentmenu/browser.pyo matches
- 1557911 - shlog.c: linux log shell security syslog
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- /*
- * shlog.c (c) Mixter
- * FIXED Version (thanks to scagneti@chisel.toolcity.net)
- * Well, this does not too much.. it will determine the
- * origin (remote IP address) from which a shell is launched (user
- * id/remote host), and write a syslog entry, everytime a login shell
- * is invoked. This can help against login trojans, or just for providing
- * better audit trails.
- 1546594 - epixoip: hacked security incident compromised
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- #!/bin/bash
- # Fri Aug 28 18:53:06 PDT 2009 by epixoip (epixoip@hush.com)
- # collects evidence in the event
- # of a security incident.
- echo -n "[+] Creating evidence directory: "
- mkdir -v ~/evidence 2>/dev/null
- echo "done."
- 765957 - Image Steganography: file anonymity privacy security
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- I like the new Image Steganography program released by Ultimate Anonymity http://www.ultimate-anonymity.com/products
- It allows you to hide sensitive data within any picture file on your PC. It uses strong AES encrypted password protection. I was actually able to hide other images within an image and found that very neat. Anyone else looking at your computer can launch the image and see it without knowing there is sensitive data hidden inside it. very sneaky indeed. Ultimate Anonymity has a LOT of cool privacy and security tools like this on its website.