Archive for the ‘Black Hat Software’ Category

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Your thoughts on race and social class?

I grew up very poor, near Oakland. A lot of brothers lived in my community. But, only about three dozen graduated highshool with me. Most of thje rest were white and Asian. Why?
I went to college near Oakland before I ran out of money, and moved to Phoenix. Very few brothers were in any of my classes. From the looks of things, there are very few in college here as well.
I know many black men that are IT professionals, dentitsts, software developers, managers, and so on. They all have a few things in common; Not a one of them speak ‘slap’ like, ‘Who you be’, ‘whas is up’, ‘were it be’. None of them wear hats backward. None of them walk around wearing ther pants hanging down. They all act professional.
I can’t even remember the last time someone made a racial statement to me. Why is that? Maybe that is because I am a positive person whom does not act ‘ghetto’.

Your socioeconomic status (class status) almost always trumps your racial identity. Each class in a culture usually has it’s own identifying dress code and speech. Which is why people in poor areas will often listen to the same music, where the same clothes, and act in the same manner regardless of race. Ditto for people in wealthy areas. If you are able to move from one class to another (which is fairly rare, so congratulations) you are expected to also adopt the behaviors of the new class to which you now belong. Class is a very powerful thing and often the only important color is green.

How many are willing to recieve more spam by upgrading to IE& or 8 and firefox?

I have found that when I switched to IE 7 from IE 6 that 7 took away my ability to control my computer and gave microsoft and other sites more control. I have started getting the pop up adds that microsoft has called bing even with a pop up browesr. I remeber when there used to be no pop ups and no spam and as each upgrade comes and the security patches come it takes more control of my computer away from me. It also does not allow software that I paid thousands of dollars for to be used anymore, next year the IT industry will force us to recieve spam and commercials and suck up my band width that I pay for so they can make a buck, On my Dime. I get high speed connection line and what happens they start using flash adds that I don’t want and other live feedsthat I don’t want it allows any compay to infiltrate your computer and read any information you may have on it making your computer everyones computer. They take your pictures out of your computer and use them with out your consent and they take control of your computer so you can’t stop them. Firefox is the same way How many of you are tired of getting these web site spams that you can’t stop? or hae to upgrade to the next level of flash to watch something that yo can’t stop the adds on like yahoo video or Fox news? I have been using computers since 1988 and am sad to see the computers going the way of the TV, add after add with 10 minutes of content for an hour of spam bombarding the user with even more annoying flash ads and popup advertisements so websites can scalp more ad commissions. Is anyone else tired of this? The black hats used to warn about this happening and I did not believe it untill I have seen what they have done to this point. If you upgrade to IE 7 or 8 or firefox 3 you no longer control the information on your computer it is open to all these companies who can use your pictures and scalp anything you have on your computer and call it there own because they own the software you are using. Are yo read to start paying a monthly fee from now on for every software you have bought? Well it’
Google chrome is no different it colects all your information and user data and what you buy and search for you got to be kidding, you have no ideal what we are dealing with do you.

First, make sure to install Adblock PLus, in firefox, it will remove almost every advertisement on a web page.

Second, if you are getting pop-ups, you almost certainly have a "virus" on your computer. Try a scan with Malware Bytea Anti-Malware (free version works fine) at http://malwarebytes.org

Third, pop-ups are not spam. Spam is unsolicited email.

Fourth, if you feel "owned" download a copy of Ubuntu from http://ubuntu.com and install that in place of windows, or along-side it in a dual-boot configuration. (This is the default when you install Ubuntu on a system that already has windows… It will allow you to choose either Linux, or Windows to start up each time you turn on your computer.)

Are you familiar with these terms?

Some random definitions:

Daisy Chaining - This is what every good hacker does to avoid getting caught. Basically, you gain entry to a computer or network and use it to gain access to another, then to another. Hackers who get away with database theft usually do this then backtrack (this means they go backward after doing what they intended nd cover their tracks by destroying logs etc).

would-be cracker (a Black Hat hacker) or script-kiddie - This term denotes those who do not know how to hack systems but use malicious code written by others to do their damage.

back door - In the security of a system, a hole deliberately left in place by designers or maintainers. May be intended for use by service technicians. Syn. trap door.

bit bucket 1. The universal data sink. Discarded, lost or destroyed data is said to have gone to the bit bucket. Sometimes amplified as The Great Bit Bucket in the Sky.

cracker - One who breaks security on a system. Coined by hackers in defense against journalistic misuse of the term "hacker." The term "cracker" reflects a strong revulsion at the theft and vandalism perpetrated by cracking rings. There is far less overlap between hackerdom and crackerdom than most would suspect.

deep magic An awesomely arcane technique central to a program or system, esp. one that could only have been composed by a true wizard. Many techniques in cryptography, signal processing, graphics and artificial intelligence are deep magic.

foo1. interj. Term of disgust. 2. Used very generally as a sample name for absolutely anything, esp. programs and files. … etymology is obscure.

hacker 1. A person who enjoys exploring the details of programmable systems and how to stretch their capabilities. 2. One who programs enthusiastically. 3. A person who is good at programming quickly. 4. An expert at a particular program, as in ‘a Unix hacker’. 5. [deprecated] A malicious meddler who tries to discover sensitive information by poking around. The correct term for this sense is "cracker."

KISS Principle "Keep It Simple, Stupid." Often invoked when discussing design to fend off creeping featurism and control development complexity. Possibly related to the marketroid maxim, "Keep It Short and Simple."

kluge 1. A Rube Goldberg (or Heath Robinson) device, whether in hardware or software. 2. A clever programming trick intended to solve a particularly nasty case in an expedient, if not clear, manner. 3. Something that works for the wrong reason.

lots of MIPS but no I/O adj. A person who is technically brilliant but who can’t seem to communicate with human beings effectively. Technically it describes a machine that has lots of processing power but is bottlenecked on input-output.

munge vt. 1. [derogatory] To imperfectly transform information. 2. A comprehensive rewrite of a routine, data structure or whole program. 3. To modify data in some way that the speaker doesn’t need to go into right now.

netiquette n. The conventions of politeness recognized on Usenet, such as avoidance of cross-pointing to inappropriate groups and refraining from commercial pluggery outside the biz groups.

phreaking 1. The art and science of cracking the phone network (so as, for example, to make free long-distance calls). 2. By extension, security-cracking in any other context (especially, but not exclusively, on communications networks).

raster burn n. Eyestrain brought on by too many hours of looking at low-res, poorly tuned or glare-ridden monitors, esp. graphics monitors.

RTFM imp. [Acronym for 'Read The F------ Manual.'] 1. Used by gurus to brush off questions they consider trivial or annoying. 2. Used when reporting a problem to indicate that you aren’t just asking out of randomness: "Yes, I RTFM first."

security through obscurity (alt. security by obscurity) A hacker term for vendors’ favorite way of coping with security holes — namely, ignoring them; documenting neither any known holes nor the underlying security algorithms; or trusting that nobody will find out about them, and that people who did find about them won’t exploit them. This "strategy" never works for long.

sneaker n. An individual hired to break into places in order to test their security; analogous to "tiger team."

spaghetti code n. Code with a complex and tangled control structure, esp. one using many GOTOs, exceptions or other ‘unstructured’ branching constructs. Pejorative. The synonym kangaroo code has also been reported, doubtless because such code has so many jumps in it.

time bomb n. A subspecies of logic bomb that is triggered by reaching some preset time; set to go off if the programmer is fired or laid off and is not present to perform the appropriate suppressing action periodically.

Trojan horse n. A malicious, security-breaking program that is disguised as something benign, such as a directory lister, archiver, game or (in one notorious 1990 case on the Mac) a program to find and de
Egore: I love those that can read.
13: I ran out of characters so sorry about that.
Nikki D: You’re so warez, but that’s still a nice hat you’ve got on.

yes

The Black Hat Millionaire - Secret eBay Weapon: Take $1 Test

http://www.black-hat-millionaire-review.com In this Sneak Peak video Chris Canos creator of The Black Hat Millionaire internet marketing training course presents real proof of how to gain an unfair advantage and dominate eBay with secret software so controversial it should be banned. Discover killer money making products and markets on eBay within just minutes of hitting the start button. You can have an income stream up and working for you on autopilot within one hour. In the materials he shows you the exact tips, secrets, strategies as well as provides all the automated software so you can immediately begin earning serious money while working from home. Take the $1 Test Challenge. http://black-hat-millionaire-review.com

Duration : 0:3:27

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Blackhat system method secret to download free software

http://www.greyhatguru.com - this video show how site directory to hack into vendor website to download stuff for free. http://www.greyhatguru.com

Duration : 0:2:21

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Black Hat SEO And Marketing Scam

http://www.makecashnow.biz Black Hat SEO and Marketing Scam involving software from websites that package bundles of different automated submission software. Software includes: Vsearch Voodoo, Graigslist Genius, Auto Yahoo, Stealth Advertiser, Ping Slinger Gen 2, and more!

Duration : 0:3:29

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Black Hat DC 2009 - Interview with Duc Nguyen

Black Hat founder Jeff Moss interviews Black Hat speaker Duc Nguyen about his presentation on the weaknesses of Facial Recognition software from several major laptop manufacturers.

Duration : 0:9:45

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Black Hat 2008: How Hackers Get Rich (& other sordid tales)

Dark Reading’s Site Editor, Tim Wilson, speaks with White Hat Security’s Founder & CTO, Jeremiah Grossman and the Director of Software for the company, Trey Ford. The duo walks through some examples of how hackers are making a little bit of scratch to gobs of money through methods like manipulating polls and contests; exploiting QVC to get products for free and turning around to sell them for profit; or even manipulating the stock market - an Estonian stock broker gets advance copies of press releases simply by guessing the file names on the site and trading on the data.

Duration : 0:3:34

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