I am very familiar with CS.  I run CSE on our network.

 

I told them I would look at it for them if they wanted to bring it to
me.

 

They were just concerned it was someone with a grudge trying to hack.  I
felt it very unlikely myself, but figured I would ask on the list.  The
TV and movies make it appear that hacking is a lot easier than they
think. 

 

The guy on NCIS can get into any computer in seconds.....

 

Bob Fronk

 

From: Alex Eckelberry [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, January 11, 2008 2:32 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Kind of OT: Home PC Hacking

 

 

That's a good suggestion, but it won't necessarily catch rootkits. 

 

A free program like Spybot is absolutely not going to find the really
bad things (rootkits, etc.).  Bluntly, it is not nearly what it was
several years ago. 

 

I would do Joe's suggestion, along with the following:

 

- Full scan with a free product like CounterSpy Trial or Spyware Doctor
Special Edition (both will actually remove stuff, as opposed to push you
to buy something)

 

- Optionally, a full scan at antivirus.com

 

- Optionally, run a free rootkit scan with the free F-Secure Blacklight

 

- Install a free 2-way firewall, like ours (Sunbelt Personal Firewall)
or Zone Alarm and see what's going on. 

 

All free solutions, all very effective. 

 

 

________________________________

From: Louis, Joe [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, January 11, 2008 2:21 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Kind of OT: Home PC Hacking

 

I always tell people to redirect a netstat to a text file from a fresh
reboot

 

netstat -ano (winxp prof)

netstat -an (xp home)

 

Download, install (using only defaults) and run ccleaner (using only
defaults).

download and run, HiJackThis and review the log. 

 

Those are your best chances of trying to see what the problem w/o having
to spend a great deal of time with it. 

 

________________________________

From: Bob Fronk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, January 11, 2008 2:16 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Kind of OT: Home PC Hacking

 

I have an employee who believes that someone may be maliciously
"hacking" into their home computer (not company owned).

 

The PC is Windows XP SP2 with all updates.  I am not sure if XP firewall
on or not, but they are behind a Linksys router.  (Not wireless)  It is
also running AV but I think is just a free version of AVG.

 

 

I told them I felt like Malware and Spyware was more of a threat than
someone actually hacking their PC.  There is no actual proof beyond a PC
that "crashed".  It sounded to me like it was full of malware or maybe a
worm virus as it "Slowed down" considerably before the crash.

 

What is the likelihood of a "hack"?  What would be some of the things to
look for?

 

 

Bob Fronk

 

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