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#1
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I'll be traveling and will have to use Internet cafe computers to pay bills, etc. Will I be able to download Spyware on any cafe computer and will that guarantee (or help) security from people getting into my stuff?
Any suggestions? Thanks so much. |
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#2
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Hey Billy,
I have taken the liberty to move your thread out of the SpywareBlaster Forum and into a Forum where you possibly will receive more responses. This is a question that I feel you need answers to....irrespective of SpywareBlaster Personally....I would never conduct Bill paying in a Internet Cafe.
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Wilders - Terms of Service · Site FAQ · Searching the forum easier · The Art of Quoting in Posts |
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#3
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Hello,
Most internet cafe's will be using something similiar to Centurion which will keep people from installing different software so that the machine will not get full of spyware. However, nothing is ever perfectly secure, and depends if the cafe was willing to spend the money on software/hardware to protect their customers. I think the best advice is only use an connection and a system that you trust and feel comfortable using. An internet cafe is just a breeding ground for possible trouble. I'd steer clear of it. Good Luck!
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Rob McCartney My Home |
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#4
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I'm having the same problem about traveling/using internet cafes, and have been researching it up the wazoo. Unfortunately, the main suggestion is just "don't do it".
What's really interesting is that all the banks I ask about it, and the internet cafe people themselves, don't really understand what I'm asking. They just assure me that their site is encrypted. I even sent a link to that article about the key logger they found on a Kinko's machine, and they still didn't get it. I have a laptop I thought I might drag along to use, but it's 98SE and is having trouble with the wireless. It also weighs a ton, but I don't want to shell out for a newer one (need the money for the traveling, eh?). Wireless isn't totally secure either, but at least I would have control over the computer itself. I got one suggestion to use dial up to my home ISP, but of course that's not going to be cheap. Microsoft has an article that suggests using disposable passwords, but I haven't found out how to do that. Everyone will let me change the password, but if there's a key logger on the machine, it would have the new one too. There was another suggestion on the MS article, about putting XCleaner on a floppy and scanning the computer before you use it. However, I haven't been real happy wtih X-cleaner because it claims to have found a LOT of "severe" spyware but wouldnt' remove it until I paid for the program. Makes me suspicious they're using a phony report to sell the product. (I use Spyware Blaster, Ad-aware, and Spybot and they haven't found anything at all.) Sooo, what I'm wondering is if there's a way to carry Spyware Blaster on a thumb drive that will protect me while I'm on that public machine? Or some other way to use it totally anonymously and safely? If anyone can figure this out, I bet someone here can. Thanks, Callie PS I'm glad to have found this because I was going to post and didn't know where to put it. Started out in the Spyware Blaster forum... |
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#5
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I hate to use public computers because IMHO I feel that public computers especially those in schools, their security just sucks.
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#6
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BillyH and anyone else thinking of using a public wireless system: Granted some cafés have a wired system -
To completely secure one's own wireless system at home is very complex and needs quite a bit of learning to do it (yes WPA is already cracked for those who have not heard!) so do not even think about using a public wireless system in a café or hotel or otherwise unless you do not care if someone intercepts the transmission. Best wishes
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HMSS Q Section Visualise World Righteousness Semper Ad Fundum Careers in the SECRET INTELLIGENCE SERVICE <--Click link for more information |
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#7
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#8
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Yes, I was reading about Anonomizer, although I thought that still wouldn't stop eavesdroppers on the wireless connection, just once it got to Anonomizer. But it's mainly the keyloggers that worried me if I wasn't using my own computer. (I really do not want to drag it along.) What I'm hoping for is something I can take along and use to protect myself when I'm on a public computer (that my definition I can't trust). Is there a way I can use perhaps some kind of a hardware device like you mentioned on the PUBLIC computer to secure it? Also, I'm not familiar with Process Guard. Is that something that I could take along and use on the PUBLIC computer? Do you think I could use a scanner/killer on a USB thumb drive, for instance. |
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#10
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Cheers ![]()
__________________
"Illegitimis non carborundum"
translation: "Don't let the bastards grind you down" U.S. General Joseph W. "Vinegar Joe" Stilwell (1883-1946) Two Photographers |
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#12
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I'm not concerned about hardware keyloggers, or cameras watching the screen (both of which seem unlikely in a public computer), but I thought I understood from one of the articles I'd read about (software/spyware) keyloggers that some of them could capture screenshots without a camera? I'm sure that "no internet cafe owner would allow someone to install software on their machines" except that although they might not "allow" software to be installed on their machine, I'm not sure they'd understand how it might happen without their permission --- just like the 92% of home users who have spyware and don't realize it. (or whatever the article said, I've lost the source sorry). Using an onscreen keypad sounds like a great idea, the Windows one or one on the bank site, if they had one. At least the likeilhood of the machine having a keylogger, AND one of the ones that can monitor the screen, is getting smaller. Speaking of sources, here's the Fred Langa article in response to an inquiry I made of him: http://langa.com/newsletters/2004/2004-11-29.htm I've also heard from Brandon Watts that he'll be addressing the issue(s). thanks for all your suggestions --- I've read even MORE about the problem with all the references. PS: Probably what I'll do is really interrogate the admin at a couple of places I might use for sensitive transactions. Fortunately, I'll mostly be in one place. I think Kinko's might be the best bet, as they've been burned once and are surely more aware now (although they're also the most expensive place to use --- and don't have espresso bars) |
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#13
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#14
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1) would *looking* at the cable between keyboard and computer be enough to make sure there wasn't a hardware keylogger? 2) it sounds like jap and tor and anonomizer encrypt the data from the website onward but NOT between my laptop and the wireless access point. So doesn't that mean that everything I type on my own computer is visible while it's in the air? -- since most public access points don't have any log on or encryption of their own. Since, with wireless, I was more concerned about eavesdropping at a wi-fi (war driving etc), I thought that if I was in some resort cyber cafe that wouldn't be too likely. Sigh, this means I have to go buy a laptop cuz the one I have (win98SE) isn't doing too well with the wireless idea. Not to mention it weighs a ton... btw, this is fascinating information I'm reading up about -- I'm certainly the most expert of anyone I know around here!! |
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#15
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Was he just using the regular old public computer? wireless? had he taken any kind of precautions? was his password hacked or stolen by keyloggers etc? (I don't *have* $12,000, but of course can't afford to lose what I do have) |
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#16
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With all apologies to Paranoid2000's expertise JAP may be compromised. Please see this article regarding a very good discussion about the possibility.
__________________
HMSS Q Section Visualise World Righteousness Semper Ad Fundum Careers in the SECRET INTELLIGENCE SERVICE <--Click link for more information |
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#17
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Whether you think JAP is spyware/compromised/unusable as a result (as some of the hot-air vendors on that Sourceforge thread seem to think) is your choice but even with this feature, using JAP is far more secure than browsing in the clear (where everything you do is visible to your ISP - who may not even need a court order to spill the beans). |
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#18
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__________________
HMSS Q Section Visualise World Righteousness Semper Ad Fundum Careers in the SECRET INTELLIGENCE SERVICE <--Click link for more information |
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#19
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I'm on the road now (going 'round the world). I copied and pasted some of the text for my "stuff", but don't plan to pay bills, etc.
Thanks for all of the great input and happy travels. |
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#20
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If only any of the Internet cafes would allow me to install my ipGuardian, then my worries about someone stealing my passwords (when I am logging to my internet bank, my discount stock broker etc to pay my bills and to check my stocks) will be lessened. Where I have to use a foreign PC, I normally ask for permission to install my ipguardian (which is my password manager cum anti-phishing tool). That would give me a peace of mind for a safer surfing experience.
The other alternative, if I can plug my laptop into the (hotel) network, I should feel safer too! P/S I remember when I was young, there was a TV series : "have gun will travel". Nowadays, my new phrase is a "Have USB will travel" :-). With my usb, it carries my encrypted password file, so I do not need to type in any password on the foreign PC. |
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#22
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#24
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I would never ever use the computers in a public internet cafe, they're just too insecure. You never know whether the computers have trojans or malware on them.
I only log on to this forum from my own computer at home, because my home computer has been secured by me very tightly. I once tried to log on to wilders by using the computers in my school, but after seeing all the malware and tons of tracking cookies on the computers in my school, I decided to use my own computer at home instead. |
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#25
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Anonymizing proxies like JAP or Tor will prevent this by encrypting the connection from the PC to the first mix server but they do require client software installation. The best bet would seem to be a low-footprint browser (like Ghostzilla) not requiring installation with an anonymizing client built-in. |
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