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Author Topic: Security warning: trojan stealing coins, swapping C&P addresses  (Read 3218 times)
Kluge
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March 23, 2012, 05:13:14 AM
 #21

Hm. Glad I double-check the entire address before sending out of habit (originally, I didn't know Satoshi Client checks for address validity, and always worried I would accidentally not copy the entire address). [subbed]
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March 23, 2012, 10:44:49 AM
 #22

subscribing

another argument pro aliases
rdponticelli
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March 23, 2012, 10:56:52 AM
 #23

another argument pro aliases

And another reason not to use windows with valuable data...
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March 23, 2012, 11:04:31 AM
 #24

another argument pro aliases

And another reason not to use windows with valuable data...
Any other OS just as vulnerable to trojan horses if users installs the horses themselves.

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March 23, 2012, 12:51:59 PM
 #25

another argument pro aliases

And another reason not to use windows with valuable data...

300 million windows 7 users are not going to switch to linux. The windows bitcoin client should be hardened as much as possible against these kinds of attacks, because windows users are by far the largest demographic. We need them if bitcoin is to succeed.
rdponticelli
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March 24, 2012, 04:21:00 PM
 #26

another argument pro aliases

And another reason not to use windows with valuable data...
Any other OS just as vulnerable to trojan horses if users installs the horses themselves.

True. But almost every horse out there is targeting windows users. So, at least by now, being out of it is being safer...

And the diversity and complexity of the free software ecosystem also makes more difficult to make horses which works out of the box on every setup. Some users will choose gnome, some kde, some unity, some fluxbox, and so on... It's not that easy to write exploits which would work with every possible setup...

300 million windows 7 users are not going to switch to linux. The windows bitcoin client should be hardened as much as possible against these kinds of attacks, because windows users are by far the largest demographic. We need them if bitcoin is to succeed.

Of course, and developers are working hard on this. And hopefully, p2sh will be a step in that direction. But people have to know that they have safer choices...
John (John K.)
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March 31, 2012, 09:29:47 AM
 #27

Here's the guy: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=74828.msg828719;boardseen#new
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