Any Tech read Hackin9 magazine (Printed in Poland) sold in states ($14.99)

tankman1989

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For some time now I have been an avid reader of Hackin9.org's bi-monthly magazine. I look at it as a means to figure out how the "bad guys" think and then take measures to block/deter this.

I haven't bought a mag for almost 8 months now and I'm feeling left out. I was wondering if anyone here has any of the recent back issues?

In addition, I have considered scanning all the copies I have into PDF so they can be shared more easily with other members.

I have learned a lot from this magazine, such as how to secretly and securely sneak any virus/trojan/etc into/onto a machine without any AV program detecting this. It has never not worked. What is scary is that ALL AV programs except for one do nothing to defend against this "invasion route" and the one that does protect against this you have to manually turn the switch on in a CL setting which is actually pretty difficult to do, I have never seen one computer with this AV with this switch turned on. *these computers have to be of the NT variety or possibly a few Linux flavors (If they are running a specific file system, then their Linux box can be hacked just like a Windows box - and I would say 50%+ ubuntu users have this hole in their security).
 
For some time now I have been an avid reader of Hackin9.org's bi-monthly magazine. I look at it as a means to figure out how the "bad guys" think and then take measures to block/deter this.

I haven't bought a mag for almost 8 months now and I'm feeling left out. I was wondering if anyone here has any of the recent back issues?

In addition, I have considered scanning all the copies I have into PDF so they can be shared more easily with other members.

I have learned a lot from this magazine, such as how to secretly and securely sneak any virus/trojan/etc into/onto a machine without any AV program detecting this. It has never not worked. What is scary is that ALL AV programs except for one do nothing to defend against this "invasion route" and the one that does protect against this you have to manually turn the switch on in a CL setting which is actually pretty difficult to do, I have never seen one computer with this AV with this switch turned on. *these computers have to be of the NT variety or possibly a few Linux flavors (If they are running a specific file system, then their Linux box can be hacked just like a Windows box - and I would say 50%+ ubuntu users have this hole in their security).

Never heard of it, sounds interesting though.

So what is this route, in a nutshell? Is it a manual job or can be done as a driveby attack?
 
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