#1 2014-04-09 23:51:14
Pull whatever link you like, the title says it all.
Should not the name of the Fifth Horseman be Panic?
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#2 2014-04-10 01:15:18
The good news is that High Street doesn't use any form of encryption, so your password isn't exposed by this bug. Instead, it's potentially exposed all the time.* Hope you don't use the same password anywhere else.
*Under circumstances where someone is able to eavesdrop on your traffic as you log in. Which may be harder or easier than exploiting the heartbeat bug, depending on how you connect.
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#3 2014-04-10 01:50:41
But what about being afraid? Shouldn't we quiver in a corner or some such?!?
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#4 2014-04-10 10:08:01
*quiver*
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#5 2014-04-10 13:44:48
For those running Chrome, the Chromebleed extension will at least tell you which sites are still running unpatched.
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/deta … ggilajhpic
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#8 2014-04-16 18:54:38
Emmeran wrote:
phreddy wrote:
Mashable.com has alist which may be helpful to some.
So basically if you trusted your data to a company that used Freeware/Shareware for security you have been deservedly fucked. Tell me again how this shareware/open source shit is superior?
Fortunately, none of the banks or the online bill pay I deal with were using it. Anyone who used Facebook, Instagram, Google or Yahoo to transmit or post their sensitive information pretty much deserve it.
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#9 2014-04-16 23:27:35
Emmeran wrote:
Tell me again how this shareware/open source shit is superior?
Hey, we can't all be as secure as Adobe Flash.
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#10 2014-04-17 02:46:32
square wrote:
Hey, we can't all be as secure as Adobe Flash.
I didn't realize people were using Flash for secure transactions.
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