In linux binaries, in any linux distro, I've discovered the same strings
which I believe may be due to a virus or trojan.
Yet, clamav, rkhunter, chkrootkit do not detect abnormalities.
Whether I run 'strings' on the binary files or view with vim or gedit, here
is what is always seen inside the
Not sure what precisely those strings are from, but I can tell you right now
what they ARE (along with the lists of commands) after looking at /bin/ps
That's the function table for the binary. The @ sign you're seeing is
actually represented as ^@ (one character, not two) - it's a null
Op maandag 14-12-2009 om 20:29 uur [tijdzone -0500], schreef Daniel
Chen:
My (perhaps flawed) impression is that many desktop users would not care
about IPv6.
[irony style=smile]My (perhaps flawed) impression is that many
consumers would not care about the environment.[/irony]
The trouble is:
Am 17.12.2009 um 00:04 schrieb Alain Kalker:
Gently coaxing users to get acquainted with IPv6 is IMO a
much better idea than their ISPs dropping letters in their
mailboxes one
day stating Either switch to IPv6 NOW or lose connectivity.
As no IPv4 address will be removed in the forseeable
On Wed, Dec 16, 2009 at 6:04 PM, Alain Kalker m...@dds.nl wrote:
The trouble is: IPv6 is coming, whether anyone cares or not. IPv4 is
rapidly running out of addresses, so sooner or later we're going to have
to switch. Gently coaxing users to get acquainted with IPv6 is IMO a
much better idea