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#1 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Member Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Margaritaville
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Who's Watching the Watchers?
Recently I posted a thread about monitoring computers in your home. As in your kids computers. Having done so I recieved a fair bit of helpful advice. I have had monitoring software on my computer for a while now. And just to be clear here, everyone who logs on to any computer that is on our home net recieves a pop-up that tells them they are being monitored. No one seems to have a probelm with it( including my teenage daughter) suprizingly enough. The software I am using is Spector Pro. Great program for anyone who is looking for something of it's nature. Which brings me to the title of this thread. I had recommended this program to a friend. He purchased the program outright (no trial offered), had a bit of a time installing it on his machine. Finally got it up and running. Was thinking about running in on one of his office machines as well, but was a bit skeptical about forking out another $99.00 only to have it not work. So he installs his copy from home to see if it would work. It did. The next morning he gets an email from SpectorSoft telling him he had 24 hrs to contact them about registering the second copy of the software. And if he did not contact them they would render all of their software inoperative. Still no problem, he going to buy another copy anyhow. But what freaked him and myself out was the fact that they were able to get past his router firewall,software firewalls, AV program, and numorus anti spyware and anti trojan software and see stuff on his machines. So, once again we should ask who is watching the watchers? How secure are our machines?
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Indecision may or may not be my problem.. :cool: Abit NF7-S v2+Athlon XP 2600 200 @ x11 2194.3 1.65 vcore 2x512 Corsair PC3200 DDR400 MSI Nvidia 5700 LE WD 80GB 7200 WD 40GB 7200 Plextor 712a DVD+R/RW CD-R/RW Folding for Team32 |
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#2 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Team 32 Folding Member Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Irvine, CA
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well they antivirus/trojan stuff probably wouldn't have mattered. But I would think theoretically what he could do is in his software firewall would be to block all access to the net for the software, he should check what setting he had on for it because if it allowed outgoing packets well there is your answer there. Also the router would let the sending packets go because it would be considered "solicited". Furthermore the software if they have his e-mail probably asked him to regester some sort of CD key and thats probably how they identified him.
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CPU: Athlon XP Barton 2800+ (200FSB*11.5 @ 2300 MHz) 1.875 Vcore |48 Hours Prime Stable MOBO: Abit NF7-S Revision 2.0 HARD DRIVE: ATA Wester Digital 160Gig w/8Mb Cache HD WD1600JB MEMORY: PC 3200 Samsung 2x512 DDRRAM 2.5-3-3-11 @ 400 MHz POWER: Enermax 460 Watt Power Supply VIDEOCARD: ATI All In Wonder 9800 Pro (399/375) O/S: Dual Boot: Ubuntu 9.04 Heatware Got a wireless network? Secure it! |
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#3 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() UnseenModerator Join Date: Apr 2001
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Monitoring software by its very nature is Trojan like in fact many retail products are based widely available trojans and keyloggers, considering that most monitoring software offer the ability to report over lan or email would make me believe that it also has the ability to connect to other sources. I would also suggest that if people took interest in the security rather than throwing yet another application at the problem then many of the issues which appear to exist could be reduced.. Its exceptionaly feasible and not to hard to see what connection each application makes and to what IP addresses... Its also easy enough to block the external IP addresses or ports accessed by this application at the router or firewall, thus resolving who get sent information. From my perspective your friend appears to have little interest in attempting to understand his security issues .... if his security mattered that much he never would have installed a ligitimate trojan on his system because thats what hes done. A great deal of security sites have in the past reviewed this type of software and many can be exploited or increase the possibility of trojan infection due to requiring more relaxed security.... Knowledge protects a system more than software
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Fixed my Gentoo issues with the command 'emerge debian'
Last edited by UnseenMenace; 03-24-05 at 10:19 AM. |
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#4 | ||||
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() UnseenModerator Join Date: Apr 2001
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Your friend also took little interest in understanding the application he purchased, the option list offers a remote install .. The terms and conditions are a little vauge as well or worded wellQuote:
Quote:
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Quote:
http://www.spectorsoft.com/terms.html Sounds like the Lawyers are watching the watchers, but who's reading the EULA, The Privacy Policy, Terms etc ???
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Fixed my Gentoo issues with the command 'emerge debian'
Last edited by UnseenMenace; 03-24-05 at 10:23 AM. |
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#5 | |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Member Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: My own personal HELL!
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Quote:
If you are inside a firewall, unless that firewall has been set to specifically block traffic originating from inside your network heading to the outside world, then the firewall will simply pass the traffic through. Generally, a basic firewall has a rule by default that allows all traffic originating internally to go wherever it wants. You have to program the firewall to block specific ports in order to stop programs from communicating to the outside world. For example, say that ICQ uses port 6980 to log in to the ICQ network (I don't remember exactly what port it uses). If you don't want to allow people to use ICQ at work, you have to go into the firewall and shut that port down on the inside interface for them to not be able to communicate with the ICQ servers. I can be a big security risk to not have specific firewall rules for the internal network. Say somebody downloads a trojan and installs it, if that trojan tries to contact somebody outside the firewall, the firewall will allow it because it's traffic coming from the internal network unless the ports are specifically shut down internally. Anyway, the point is, plugging a firewall into your network does not secure you from threats that are created internally. There is more configuration that needs to be done. Of course, shutting down all ports internally would likely restrict some important things, such as antivirus definitions being downloaded and whatnot. Antivirus software only finds viruses that are included in the virus definitions it has. Spector won't be listed as a virus, so the software won't do anything about it.
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Surfing the web with Dell 700m goodness! Desktop: AMD Athlon 2500+ 1.8 GHz + Abit AN7 Mobo, 1.5 GB PC3200 RAM, 120 GB + 80 GB 7200 RPM Drives, PNY GeForce 6800 Ultra 256MB, Air cooled. Overclocked to 2.1 GHz, now running at 54C! GPU OC'd to 450/1250. "Do not meddle in the affairs of wizards, for it makes them soggy, and hard to light." |
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#6 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Member Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Margaritaville
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Absolutly we are responsible for our own security. I know from my own experience in using a Linksys Wireless Router, that the software that comes with it allows you to set up IP blocks and resrictions and use times. But I have yet to this day been able to get them to work. So as far as using a schedule to restrict my kids times they are on the web ie; the wee hours in the morning, I have had to resort to shutting off the cable modem. Whisch I don't like doing because that halts my Folding. Any suggestion as to a scheduling program would be great. And short of removing Spector, how would I find and block thier spyware? None of my Anti Spyware programs have found anything. I was not of thier placement of such programs on my computer until my friend told me it happened to him.
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Indecision may or may not be my problem.. :cool: Abit NF7-S v2+Athlon XP 2600 200 @ x11 2194.3 1.65 vcore 2x512 Corsair PC3200 DDR400 MSI Nvidia 5700 LE WD 80GB 7200 WD 40GB 7200 Plextor 712a DVD+R/RW CD-R/RW Folding for Team32 |
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#7 | |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Member Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: My own personal HELL!
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This is of some interest in blocking communication with Spector: Quote:
If it were me, I don't think I'd be to worried about it, but YMMV. Again, the reason your antivirus and antispyware programs don't squawk about their software is because it is not regarded as spyware by the industry.
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Surfing the web with Dell 700m goodness! Desktop: AMD Athlon 2500+ 1.8 GHz + Abit AN7 Mobo, 1.5 GB PC3200 RAM, 120 GB + 80 GB 7200 RPM Drives, PNY GeForce 6800 Ultra 256MB, Air cooled. Overclocked to 2.1 GHz, now running at 54C! GPU OC'd to 450/1250. "Do not meddle in the affairs of wizards, for it makes them soggy, and hard to light." |
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#8 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() UnseenModerator Join Date: Apr 2001
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Alternatively you could use an application such as Net Peeker to discover what ports the Spector Pro application is using and block those http://www.net-peeker.com/
__________________
Fixed my Gentoo issues with the command 'emerge debian'
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