Amph
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June 24, 2015, 07:16:56 PM |
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there is a trick you can do to fuck those malware-keylogger or whatever they are
you need to write the password in a non standard way
for example your password is helloworld(just to make it simple), then you write h(space)l(delete)eo(delete)lo(space)w(y)(delete)o(space)r(7)(delete)l(and)d
in this way his keylogger will acquire 21 characters when your password is only made with 10
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ammy009 (OP)
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June 25, 2015, 06:17:12 AM |
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there is a trick you can do to fuck those malware-keylogger or whatever they are
you need to write the password in a non standard way
for example your password is helloworld(just to make it simple), then you write h(space)l(delete)eo(delete)lo(space)w(y)(delete)o(space)r(7)(delete)l(and)d
in this way his keylogger will acquire 21 characters when your password is only made with 10
great idea !
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Kprawn
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June 25, 2015, 06:34:21 AM |
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Also remember to physically close your built-in webcam, if you are using a notebook. I have heard about people who were recording keystrokes via the webcam access and mirrors in the room. Keep your Anti-virus / Firewalls etc. updated and they would catch most of these nasty malicious thingies. I use a combination of different products and I have been relatively lucky sofar. This is why 2FA and Multi Sig are so important. Make it as difficult as possible.
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manselr
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June 25, 2015, 11:24:59 AM |
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there is a trick you can do to fuck those malware-keylogger or whatever they are
you need to write the password in a non standard way
for example your password is helloworld(just to make it simple), then you write h(space)l(delete)eo(delete)lo(space)w(y)(delete)o(space)r(7)(delete)l(and)d
in this way his keylogger will acquire 21 characters when your password is only made with 10
There are keyloggers that will show you when you pressed delete and space during a password prompt so they could be able to figure it out.
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Amph
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Activity: 3248
Merit: 1070
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June 25, 2015, 12:00:31 PM |
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there is a trick you can do to fuck those malware-keylogger or whatever they are
you need to write the password in a non standard way
for example your password is helloworld(just to make it simple), then you write h(space)l(delete)eo(delete)lo(space)w(y)(delete)o(space)r(7)(delete)l(and)d
in this way his keylogger will acquire 21 characters when your password is only made with 10
There are keyloggers that will show you when you pressed delete and space during a password prompt so they could be able to figure it out. it must be a really advance keylogger, because i can do it with the mouse too, by highlighting it and delete it with the keyboard you can also leave the remember password of google, so you don't need to type anything and encrypt the file that contain those
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Drogon
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June 25, 2015, 01:00:52 PM |
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I don't think they would, since they intercept keystrokes before it reaches any other software so they should have it in the exact same pattern as you typed.
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BrianM
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June 25, 2015, 05:16:37 PM |
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Also remember to physically close your built-in webcam, if you are using a notebook. I have heard about people who were recording keystrokes via the webcam access and mirrors in the room. Keep your Anti-virus / Firewalls etc. updated and they would catch most of these nasty malicious thingies. I use a combination of different products and I have been relatively lucky sofar. This is why 2FA and Multi Sig are so important. Make it as difficult as possible. I saw that movie too. What was it called? just kidding. I read that the sound from the keyboard (clicking sound) can be used to train the a program to map the sound to each keystroke. Pretty advance stuff.
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newflesh
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June 25, 2015, 05:31:10 PM |
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I have no idea. I don't use any key scrambler. One of my friend told me that it's very effective to protect our bitcoin wallets from keyloggers. is it really which key scrambler is best ? Please...... I wouldn't bother as they tend to give a false sense of security but if you do decide to get one I'd recommend paying for a full version and avoid the free ones (and cracked copies for obvious reasons) as they tend to be very limited.
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twister
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June 25, 2015, 06:14:57 PM |
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Also remember to physically close your built-in webcam, if you are using a notebook. I have heard about people who were recording keystrokes via the webcam access and mirrors in the room. Keep your Anti-virus / Firewalls etc. updated and they would catch most of these nasty malicious thingies. I use a combination of different products and I have been relatively lucky sofar. This is why 2FA and Multi Sig are so important. Make it as difficult as possible. Are all key loggers picked up by Antiviruses or are there any that might trick AV into believing they're harmless? Also, do you mind telling which products you have been using for security? I try to keep my coins on an offline computer as much as possible but I need to keep a few on the live one as sometimes I am not able to access the offline machine.
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ammy009 (OP)
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June 25, 2015, 06:23:42 PM |
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Also remember to physically close your built-in webcam, if you are using a notebook. I have heard about people who were recording keystrokes via the webcam access and mirrors in the room. Keep your Anti-virus / Firewalls etc. updated and they would catch most of these nasty malicious thingies. I use a combination of different products and I have been relatively lucky sofar. This is why 2FA and Multi Sig are so important. Make it as difficult as possible. Are all key loggers picked up by Antiviruses or are there any that might trick AV into believing they're harmless. Also, do you mind telling which products you have been using for security? I try to keep my coins on an offline computer as much as possible but I need to keep a few on the live one as sometimes I am not able to access the offline machine. A huge part of my bitcoins (600+) are stored in the deep cold storage & all payments from it will be signed offline. But, a small portion of coins (about 100+) are online. And I'm using currently "Bitdefender Total Security 2015" & also I encrypted all my private files on my laptop. But, I always feel insecurity ..............
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PolarPoint
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June 25, 2015, 06:43:09 PM |
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Are all key loggers picked up by Antiviruses or are there any that might trick AV into believing they're harmless?
This I want to know too. I would think keyloggers are easy to detect for antivirus and malware scanners. My antivirus does a complete scan of my hard drive once a week and I keep my windows updated, should that be enough for a someone who doesn't visit doggy sites?
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twister
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June 25, 2015, 06:55:46 PM |
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Also remember to physically close your built-in webcam, if you are using a notebook. I have heard about people who were recording keystrokes via the webcam access and mirrors in the room. Keep your Anti-virus / Firewalls etc. updated and they would catch most of these nasty malicious thingies. I use a combination of different products and I have been relatively lucky sofar. This is why 2FA and Multi Sig are so important. Make it as difficult as possible. Are all key loggers picked up by Antiviruses or are there any that might trick AV into believing they're harmless. Also, do you mind telling which products you have been using for security? I try to keep my coins on an offline computer as much as possible but I need to keep a few on the live one as sometimes I am not able to access the offline machine. A huge part of my bitcoins (600+) are stored in the deep cold storage & all payments from it will be signed offline. But, a small portion of coins (about 100+) are online. And I'm using currently "Bitdefender Total Security 2015" & also I encrypted all my private files on my laptop. But, I always feel insecurity .............. Are all key loggers picked up by Antiviruses or are there any that might trick AV into believing they're harmless?
This I want to know too. I would think keyloggers are easy to detect for antivirus and malware scanners. My antivirus does a complete scan of my hard drive once a week and I keep my windows updated, should that be enough for a someone who doesn't visit doggy sites? I use MalwareBytes Anti-Malware and it usually is pretty thorough in detecting unwanted things but I still feel a bit insecure and I do have encrypted keys and other important files and they're all backed up but I have seen people reporting on this forum besides having all the security in the world, they got hacked and lost their coins and usually the explanation people give to that is someone must have stole the key, but to decrypt the key one must know the password so there must be some key loggers that are getting pass AV's radar.
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jertsy
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June 25, 2015, 07:17:50 PM |
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Are all key loggers picked up by Antiviruses or are there any that might trick AV into believing they're harmless?
This I want to know too. I would think keyloggers are easy to detect for antivirus and malware scanners. My antivirus does a complete scan of my hard drive once a week and I keep my windows updated, should that be enough for a someone who doesn't visit doggy sites? A rootkit virus is capable of hiding itself from most regular anti-virus software, and it can have associated keyloggers and other malicious tools. Often the only way to detect a rootkit is to scan a computer by booting from a live anti-virus scanning CD, which runs without starting the computer's normal operating system. A number of anti-virus software companies have live CDs available, or software to make bootable thumb drives.
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Amph
Legendary
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Activity: 3248
Merit: 1070
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June 25, 2015, 07:24:08 PM |
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Also remember to physically close your built-in webcam, if you are using a notebook. I have heard about people who were recording keystrokes via the webcam access and mirrors in the room. Keep your Anti-virus / Firewalls etc. updated and they would catch most of these nasty malicious thingies. I use a combination of different products and I have been relatively lucky sofar. This is why 2FA and Multi Sig are so important. Make it as difficult as possible. Are all key loggers picked up by Antiviruses or are there any that might trick AV into believing they're harmless. Also, do you mind telling which products you have been using for security? I try to keep my coins on an offline computer as much as possible but I need to keep a few on the live one as sometimes I am not able to access the offline machine. A huge part of my bitcoins (600+) are stored in the deep cold storage & all payments from it will be signed offline. But, a small portion of coins (about 100+) are online. And I'm using currently "Bitdefender Total Security 2015" & also I encrypted all my private files on my laptop. But, I always feel insecurity .............. Are all key loggers picked up by Antiviruses or are there any that might trick AV into believing they're harmless?
This I want to know too. I would think keyloggers are easy to detect for antivirus and malware scanners. My antivirus does a complete scan of my hard drive once a week and I keep my windows updated, should that be enough for a someone who doesn't visit doggy sites? I use MalwareBytes Anti-Malware and it usually is pretty thorough in detecting unwanted things but I still feel a bit insecure and I do have encrypted keys and other important files and they're all backed up but I have seen people reporting on this forum besides having all the security in the world, they got hacked and lost their coins and usually the explanation people give to that is someone must have stole the key, but to decrypt the key one must know the password so there must be some key loggers that are getting pass AV's radar. i'm using malwarebyte, too, and while i found it to be a beast, i still added malware anti-exploit and zemana antilogger, also hitmanpro for some searching from time to time but your best bet it is to not download anything that has not any digital sign, if you follow this, it is impossible to be hacked
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PolarPoint
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June 25, 2015, 07:38:00 PM |
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Are all key loggers picked up by Antiviruses or are there any that might trick AV into believing they're harmless?
This I want to know too. I would think keyloggers are easy to detect for antivirus and malware scanners. My antivirus does a complete scan of my hard drive once a week and I keep my windows updated, should that be enough for a someone who doesn't visit doggy sites? A rootkit virus is capable of hiding itself from most regular anti-virus software, and it can have associated keyloggers and other malicious tools. Often the only way to detect a rootkit is to scan a computer by booting from a live anti-virus scanning CD, which runs without starting the computer's normal operating system. A number of anti-virus software companies have live CDs available, or software to make bootable thumb drives. Thanks for your answer. I heard of rootkits, my impression of them is possible to detect, but extremely troublesome to remove. Computer security is too complicated for most people and this is bad news for new bitcoin users.
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AccountStore.biz
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Activity: 22
Merit: 0
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June 25, 2015, 07:39:45 PM |
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No any "key scrambler" can be defeated. They just provide a false sense of security.
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twister
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June 25, 2015, 07:44:46 PM |
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Are all key loggers picked up by Antiviruses or are there any that might trick AV into believing they're harmless?
This I want to know too. I would think keyloggers are easy to detect for antivirus and malware scanners. My antivirus does a complete scan of my hard drive once a week and I keep my windows updated, should that be enough for a someone who doesn't visit doggy sites? A rootkit virus is capable of hiding itself from most regular anti-virus software, and it can have associated keyloggers and other malicious tools. Often the only way to detect a rootkit is to scan a computer by booting from a live anti-virus scanning CD, which runs without starting the computer's normal operating system. A number of anti-virus software companies have live CDs available, or software to make bootable thumb drives. I'll look for those CDs which have bootscan. Thx i'm using malwarebyte, too, and while i found it to be a beast, i still added malware anti-exploit and zemana antilogger, also hitmanpro for some searching from time to time
but your best bet it is to not download anything that has not any digital sign, if you follow this, it is impossible to be hacked
I'll download those too for added security, I usually scan all the files I download before opening them up (even though real time protection is enabled) because not all files available on net can be digitally signed. Thx for the info on extra security products.
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NorrisK
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Activity: 1946
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June 25, 2015, 08:22:53 PM |
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What about the hitman pro alert stuff? It basically protects your browser from any suspicious activity and is also supposed to block stuff coming from ads that are compromised. Sounds pretty good to have as a backup during browsing.
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Amph
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June 26, 2015, 07:51:34 AM |
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What about the hitman pro alert stuff? It basically protects your browser from any suspicious activity and is also supposed to block stuff coming from ads that are compromised. Sounds pretty good to have as a backup during browsing.
isn't this not free? how much is the cost, i don't want to pay for protecting my ass, when if i follow simple rules no hacker can hack anything the best antivirus is still your brain
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