I don't know about you folks, but I just love hearing from malware experts
(so called) that they found some new form of threat or behavior that many of us
have seen 20 - 25 years or more ago. Like this article, we know it's dribble
and by far nothing at all new. But when I'm talking to folks
On 01/30/2012 10:34 AM, michael.blanch...@emc.com wrote:
I don't know about you folks, but I just love hearing from malware experts
(so called) that they found some new form of threat or behavior that many of
us have seen 20 - 25 years or more ago. Like this article, we know it's
dribble
I just type everything in using on the fly, in my head blowfish encryption to
fool the keyloggers
Michael P. Blanchard
Senior Security Engineer, CISSP, GCIH, CCSA-NGX, MCSE
Office of Information Security Risk Management
EMC ² Corporation
32 Coslin Drive
Southboro, MA 01772
From:
On Mon, 30 Jan 2012 10:34:57 EST, michael.blanch...@emc.com said:
s dribble and by far nothing at all new. But when I'm talking to folks that
claim to be malware experts, or IT security experts, and they start stating
stuff like yah, malware's getting so bad these days that viruses are
On Mon, 30 Jan 2012 10:51:19 EST, michael.blanch...@emc.com said:
I just type everything in using on the fly, in my head blowfish encryption
to fool the keyloggers
Cryptonomicon time.
pgpIqALSwRJ2T.pgp
Description: PGP signature
___
Fun and
From: michael.blanch...@emc.com
Date sent: Mon, 30 Jan 2012 10:34:57 -0500
Is it weird that I no longer feel old when I realize I've been doing this
stuff
for about 25 years now? Maybe THAT's the sign that I'm truly old? :-)
It feels kinda funny when I
I always wonder how these guys come out with such new interesting words to
name it?
=
Sanjay Katkar
Quick Heal Technologies, India
=
At 11:58 PM 1/25/2012, Robert Slade wrote: