I'm surprised that this hasn't been done already.
I'm surprised that this hasn't been done already.
@alwaysanforever: now that is cool.
"But we all know how to do one thing real well, each one of us"
What about symbolic links?
How do you buy and resell software? I rarely ever see software being sold on sites other than that of the developer.
@glenwilbor: I'm not sure about that. The original article says that Zeus does both: steals login information and hijacks the session. Their description of "hijacking" is vague but I can assume they mean it holds the cookies and transfers funds while the account is still logged in.
@Mrrix32: wait, wut? Expensive?
@minibeardeath: when people started making serious cash on them.
Cool, now I can spread my paranoia and security knowledge to yet another field. If I start a security job now while tech is being implemented into new fields, I'll be rich before I'm 30.
@rick23: just head to the internet black markets with around $1000 and you can buy yourself your very own Zeus!
Zeus is an incredible trojan. I saw a demo run video made by some security company and its plugin system is fantastic, plugins are much stronger than in plugin-able free trojans around the internet. That is probably because of the massive profit and the cost of this trojan though, it takes a few grand to your hands on…
@SynthOno: You're starred so you can probably see all the ironic comments left by unapproved members.
@Hello Mister Walrus: crypto-anarchy is much more fun
@TheCrudMan: Patch what? It's an app, not a vulnerability. This is just a case of stupid users.
That is badass.
@geolemon: Ok, thanks for the explanation. No wonder I don't see people going around with store-bought tablets.
Better idea: turn all PS3s into torrent machines, distributing firmware updates p2p. Make an off switch in the settings for low-speed or limited bandwidth users.
@geolemon: no duh Android is a Linux distro, that's why I said "run Linux".
My friends and I play "Wikipedia", trying to get from one article to a completely unrelated one in as few clicks as possible.