trotsky
Registered user
As part of an ongoing technical problem, best described as "software that appears to have been puked rather than developed" (see http://www.ukgser.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=29303 if you are thinking about buying a Navman GPS) I have today installed Windows XP on a spare disk I stuck in my PC and connected to t'Internet via a dial up modem. Now this may not sound terribly exciting but I would normally not go into the wild without a Cisco PIX firewall and a network address translating ADSL router between me and the baddies.
To allow this crappy software to activate I had to switch off any firewalling and turn off my anti-virus software while running as administrator
. Now no sensible person does this on a working system, and I count myself in that group on every second day, so I dug out an old 10GB disk, plugged it in to my PC with every other disk disconnected and put a partially patched (everything pre Win XP Service Pack 2) operating system and the minimum of other software. I put on a firewall and ran it in "monitor, notify but don't block" mode. I then plugged in a dial up modem and connected to uku.co.uk who run a "no charge but dialup cost" ISP service.
The first probes appeared in ten seconds of connection; by 30 seconds I was getting "click here to protect your machine from spyware" and "Russian Girls want your Love" popups and after 50 seconds I got a "Your machine is about to shutdown" message and I had lost the rights to shut the machine down myself. By this time the machine had slowed to a crawl and the firewall couldn't keep up with attempts to probe my ports.
So the lesson is don't connect any machine to the network unless it is patched to the best possible standard (this month's PC magazines have Windows XP Service Pack 2 disks on, buy it now and save tears later on), virus protected and firewalled.
I've spent all week cursing laptop users who try to connect virus infected machines to my network at work. Now I know how messy things really are I shall be a little more tolerant... Perhaps.
To allow this crappy software to activate I had to switch off any firewalling and turn off my anti-virus software while running as administrator
The first probes appeared in ten seconds of connection; by 30 seconds I was getting "click here to protect your machine from spyware" and "Russian Girls want your Love" popups and after 50 seconds I got a "Your machine is about to shutdown" message and I had lost the rights to shut the machine down myself. By this time the machine had slowed to a crawl and the firewall couldn't keep up with attempts to probe my ports.
So the lesson is don't connect any machine to the network unless it is patched to the best possible standard (this month's PC magazines have Windows XP Service Pack 2 disks on, buy it now and save tears later on), virus protected and firewalled.
I've spent all week cursing laptop users who try to connect virus infected machines to my network at work. Now I know how messy things really are I shall be a little more tolerant... Perhaps.
