Author Topic: Hacked Computer  (Read 34288 times)

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lukybugur

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #60 on: December 31, 2011, 16:18:56 PM »
FYI, as someone who removes viruses from PCs / laptops for a living, I"m willing to share with you all a couple of "tools of the trade".

MalwareBytes and SuperAntiSpyware are the best after-the-event Anti-Virus scanning tools. Both are available to download and are installed automatically from this link

Best real-time Anti-Virus softwares in our professional opinions are F-Secure Internet Security and ESET NOD32. Both are paid-for solutions but well worth the money. I would advise everyone avoid AVG Free, AVG paid-for versions, anything McAfee and Norton related.

duke3016

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #61 on: December 31, 2011, 16:40:11 PM »
Cheers for that Neil, advice taken and acted on......

Waz1892

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #62 on: December 31, 2011, 17:19:27 PM »
paranoid full set in recently over this - maybe not a bad thing -

HAD -

monthly full scan setup
FB on https server
email (YH) password, but not overly strong
Poker Stars account

NOW -

monthly full scan setup (done a couple of days and all fine)
weekly smaller scan
FB on https server
FB with security to log in unregoniszed devices
FB removed friends with Carl and Claire (for now)
Gmail account with 2 step set up
Poker Stars account email switched to Gmail and verfication set up
Poker Stars Cashier fast option off
Poker Stars Fast option Removed

Oh and a headache  ::)
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Foggy

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #63 on: December 31, 2011, 17:45:11 PM »
Update since my OP

Pokerstars have been in touch to advise me that the hacker has spent 3-4 days playing on my now empty account. They have advised that my funds are under investigation, because the hacker might have chip dumped to another player. This is a possible avenue but not to get my hopes up, because if there is no dumping there is no recourse on Pokerstars as we as players are resposible for our own security. Seemingly it"s in their T&C"s.

Must admit. well p*** o** as they blocked my account, but let the hacker play during this period!

I know Lucky is the IT whizz kid, but for anyone out there that has Norton, after scanning normally my computer was showing only tracking cookies. Only when I did the scan in safe mode was the worm revealed. The worm was.

btmailcontrol1013(1).cab

This was quarantined afetr the safe mode scan. Those of you that aren"t whizz kids, reboot and hold down F8 during the operation. Then select safe mode and do a full scan.

After 5 years of playing online I have now lost confidence, what with FT, and now Pokerstars, and now some ars******
losing my funds. I think I will stick to live play, at least unless you get mugged on the way home, it"s miles safer.

GL all

Foggy

Claw75

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #64 on: December 31, 2011, 20:44:34 PM »
I have to say the customer service i"ve received from stars has been exceptional. I informed them of the situation and the bogus emails i"d received from the hacker on the same day. Security then contacted me within a few hours to arrange a convenient time to telephone me to discuss the situation. They explained that my account would remain frozen until they had a) investigated the activity on my account since it had been hacked and b) that i could satisfy them that my computer was secure and that my account could not be compromised again. They asked me to set up a new email account and to contact them from there attaching proof of identity, which i did yesterday morning. They telephoned me again this evening saying that my account was now ready to be reinstated to me, with the same balance as before i got hacked. I just now need to log on with a new password they have issued to me, set a pin number up, and then they"ll reactivate playing and transfer privileges on thr account (which currently remain frozen). Can"t say fairer than that imo.
« Last Edit: December 31, 2011, 20:46:08 PM by Claw75 »

George2Loose

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #65 on: December 31, 2011, 23:09:55 PM »
Buy a security token from the fpp shop. Well worth it
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Foggy

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #66 on: January 01, 2012, 00:48:56 AM »
Clare

Was there any money missing at any time?

Fatcatstu

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #67 on: January 01, 2012, 03:36:04 AM »
ok done scans with the stuff reccomended by neil too, found nothing on my laptop. officially confused!!
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lukybugur

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #68 on: January 01, 2012, 11:20:54 AM »
I had a PM from Carl this morning and it prompted me to post again.

I think many are getting a bit paranoid about their own setups here ... and I might not have helped too much with my post at the top of this page. I will post some tips for users to follow if they so wish but please give more consideration to the next couple of paragraphs about FB and other large "suppliers". Please also understand I do not claim to be a "whizz kid" and have no definite answers here - these are just my opinions based on the experiences and knowledge I have gained in the past 15 years working in the IT industry.

Facebook is hacked REGULARLY and it remains one of the biggest targets for hackers. Some of you may remember reading news articles that personal pics of Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook CEO) appeared in plain view due to a coding error within the Facebook structure just a couple of months back.

Despite your best practices regarding your passwords, if there are security "holes" on Facebook servers, getting passwords is the easy bit. In the recent past the CIA, Google, Facebook and Microsoft have all been subject to a number of attacks that have made the news so I wouldn"t get too hung up on your own PC problems. If Blue Chips companies with their $Billions / year IT infrastructures can get breached, imagine how easy it is for the same person / team of hackers to infiltrate your itty bitty PC and how much less profitable it is for them to target YOU alone. On that thought, it is likely Foggy, Clare, Carl are only three of THOUSANDS who are having similar problems and that it is not security issues on their own PCs that are to blame here. Sure, if they use the same USERNAMES and PASSWORDS for all accounts (PokerStars and Facebook for example), then it will certainly have made them easier targets.

Advice section;

Yes it is best to use real-time Anti-Virus and Firewall softwares - ESET Smart Security 5 and F-Secure Internet Security 2012 the ones I recommend - but even they are not completely infallible. Users will disable firewalls to file-share, users will click on bogus emails from "PayPal", "UPS", "FedEx" or "Barclays Bank" and "Allow" the program to run infecting their systems. I just urge you all to use a bit of EXTRA common sense and yes, a little bit of paranoia when facing such. And encourage your kids who DO just bish-bash around the internet without much care and attention (WTF not, they don"t have to pay for the IT engineer!) to do so too. The parental controls within F-Secure Internet Security are effective, easy to configure and prevent a lot of the bad things I see. Please be aware that 8 year old boys WILL type "big boobs" into Google at some point so you taking control as a parent IS worthwhile!

[UPDATED] Good passwords should be 8 characters long and contain uPPeR and LoWer case characters, at least one number and one symbol. Using a % * or ^ adds that little bit more to a password and should stop folk ever being able to "guess" it. Some people have found it useful for me to supply one for them to customise so here you go;

WekD-u.9

Another good practice on your own computing is to keep Windows up to date. The Windows Updates on your PCs / laptops are "pushed" to you for a reason. Many are security updates and although they are generally perceived to slow your system down (and yes, many have caused systems to crash, other softwares to stop working etc.), they are worth "taking the risk" on.

To check your own systems; click Start > right click on Computer (My Computer for XP users) > left click Properties



Windows XP users should be up to date to "Service Pack 3"
Windows Vista users should be up to date to "Service Pack 2"
Windows 7 (32 and 64 bit) users should be up to date to "Service Pack 1"

If you are missing any of these, the Service Packs themselves can be downloaded using "Windows Updates" (Start > Control Panel) or from www.softwarepatch.com  -  THIS IS A FREE SITE and as such, it contains adverts wanting you to click on other downloads. PLEASE BE CAREFUL to read the pages properly and to scroll down if you have to - don"t just click on the first "download now" link you see.

XP and Vista users may be required to download more than one service pack and each may take around 1 hour to download and another hour to install each.

FINALLY, installing and running too many anti-virus / anti-malware / anti-spyware scanning tools can do you more harm than good. Your PC will slow down as a result of 4 / 5 softwares all taking time to scan the same thing and connection issues can appear as many will attempt to "block" network connections. I urge you all to remove all but your Internet Security software (assuming you are using a proper paid-for one), including the MalwareBytes and SuperAntiSpyware if you have scanned your system and are happy that you are clean. Although decent, the primary function of many of them to scan your system with after-the-event (when you suspect you have a virus) but are more of a hindrance if left on a system. SpyBot, Ad-Aware, Spyware Doctor, HitMan Pro etc. are other ones many of you will have found and installed as a result of this thread.

I am not planning on doing any more "work" until 4th January but if anyone has SERIOUS and URGENT issues on their PCs (business PCs etc.) and would like support, I can arrange "Remote Control" sessions tonight and tomorrow. Initial inspections will be free of charge and any additional work will be quoted for.

If anyone would like information on me / ITW4 (my company), a list of our services can be found at www.itw4.co.uk

Neil Dawson
« Last Edit: January 01, 2012, 11:33:47 AM by lukybugur »

Chipaccrual

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #69 on: January 01, 2012, 11:31:28 AM »
Great post Neil.

Very, very good advice.


Oh, and if anyone needs any business, finance or accountancy consultancy, then I"m your man.

Unlike Neil, I charge from day one, but I"m worth it.   ;D

Des

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #70 on: January 01, 2012, 11:33:47 AM »
Many thanks for your outstanding contribution here Neil.
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fandango

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #71 on: January 01, 2012, 13:40:52 PM »

Many thanks for your outstanding contribution here Neil.


Yes many thanks Neil, great advice i am running a couple of programs at the same time Emsisoft Anti malware Emsisoft Online Armor firewall and Stopzilla.. think i need to turn off Stopzilla?.. Both are fully paid.

Regards Carl
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lukybugur

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #72 on: January 01, 2012, 14:09:25 PM »
I"m not aware of Emsisoft"s offerings or StopZilla so I"d be hesitant to advise you to turn anything off. If it"s working for you - if you have booted into Safe Mode as per Foggy"s advice, scanned your system using the tools I recommended and all is clear - you probably don"t need to do anything further.

When your Emsisoft subscriptions come up for renewal, consider ESET Smart Security 5 as mentioned above and which I"ve just found out now comes with a Parental Control. I have never set up the Parental Control as we usually only recommend ESET Anti-Virus 5 for business users with servers - our normal kind of client - but this should help anyone wishing to investigate this further - hw to configure Parental Control in ESET Smart Security 5

MintTrav

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #73 on: January 01, 2012, 14:33:57 PM »

Good passwords should be 8 characters long and contain uPPeR and LoWer case characters, at least one number and one symbol. Using a % * or ^ adds that little bit more to a password and should stop folk ever being able to "guess" it.


I"m not an IT expert, but I read somewhere recently that most of us have been taught to choose passwords that are easy for a program to break but difficult for a human to remember, whereas we should be choosing ones that are easy to remember and difficult for a program to break. A program doesn"t care whether the digits are letters, numbers or symbols - they are all just another possible digit to be tried and an 8-digit password of any type an be cracked in a short time, whereas a 30-digit one would take squillions of years longer (or something like that). The article suggested that running a few easy-to-remember words together was way more effective, ie SOLENTPOKERCLUB is far superior to BCPC**00. I"ll leave to the experts to confirm or not.

In keeping with this thread, if anyone needs a mobile nail technician, etc.............
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Jon MW

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Re: Hacked Computer
« Reply #74 on: January 01, 2012, 15:06:01 PM »


Good passwords should be 8 characters long and contain uPPeR and LoWer case characters, at least one number and one symbol. Using a % * or ^ adds that little bit more to a password and should stop folk ever being able to "guess" it.


I"m not an IT expert, but I read somewhere recently that most of us have been taught to choose passwords that are easy for a program to break but difficult for a human to remember, whereas we should be choosing ones that are easy to remember and difficult for a program to break. A program doesn"t care whether the digits are letters, numbers or symbols - they are all just another possible digit to be tried and an 8-digit password of any type an be cracked in a short time, whereas a 30-digit one would take squillions of years longer (or something like that). The article suggested that running a few easy-to-remember words together was way more effective, ie SOLENTPOKERCLUB is far superior to BCPC**00. I"ll leave to the experts to confirm or not.

In keeping with this thread, if anyone needs a mobile nail technician, etc.............


It depends if it"s a program trying to break it or a person.

Most people"s passwords are so poor that people only need to look around online to find their details and try different combinations of thing"s connected to them.
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