den4
Regular Member
I was thinking of putting this in the geek area, but it does affect a lot of people, so here it is:
taken from lockergnome
VIRUS: Self-Inflicted Sasser
http://go.lockergnome.com/305
The current worm-o-the-week, Sasser, is making the rounds in the usual effective manner, and as with the Blaster outbreak, Microsoft has issued a removal tool to help clean things up. I have a huge problem with this thing, though. Apparently, the tool is crippled in such a way that it will not function on pirated copies of Windows XP. No, I can't say that I've tested this, seeing as how I don't have any pirated copies, but I've seen references to the issue around the Web. http://www.microsoftmonitor.com/archives/002889.html
Am I supporting piracy? Not on your life! However, a reality check will reveal that piracy is going to happen regardless of whether Microsoft likes it or not. It's a part of the software business, I'm afraid. Of the potentially millions of illegitimate systems running, how many do you suppose are infected with Sasser? Probably enough to make it a significant issue. How can Microsoft justify allowing their product, and it is still their software, regardless of licensing arrangements, to remain infected, and posing a threat to legitimate licensees? I simply do not understand the warped logic in this. In fact, I call it negligent.
Microsoft has taken steps to disallow patching of these pirated systems, and quite frankly, I don't care if such machines are taken over and abused heavily. Ya gets what ya pays for. But, that does not excuse allowing these cretins to be a threat to the rest of the online society. Be on the lookout for Logic, which has escaped Redmond, and is to be considered armed and dangerous. Film at eleven. kashii:
taken from lockergnome
VIRUS: Self-Inflicted Sasser
http://go.lockergnome.com/305
The current worm-o-the-week, Sasser, is making the rounds in the usual effective manner, and as with the Blaster outbreak, Microsoft has issued a removal tool to help clean things up. I have a huge problem with this thing, though. Apparently, the tool is crippled in such a way that it will not function on pirated copies of Windows XP. No, I can't say that I've tested this, seeing as how I don't have any pirated copies, but I've seen references to the issue around the Web. http://www.microsoftmonitor.com/archives/002889.html
Am I supporting piracy? Not on your life! However, a reality check will reveal that piracy is going to happen regardless of whether Microsoft likes it or not. It's a part of the software business, I'm afraid. Of the potentially millions of illegitimate systems running, how many do you suppose are infected with Sasser? Probably enough to make it a significant issue. How can Microsoft justify allowing their product, and it is still their software, regardless of licensing arrangements, to remain infected, and posing a threat to legitimate licensees? I simply do not understand the warped logic in this. In fact, I call it negligent.
Microsoft has taken steps to disallow patching of these pirated systems, and quite frankly, I don't care if such machines are taken over and abused heavily. Ya gets what ya pays for. But, that does not excuse allowing these cretins to be a threat to the rest of the online society. Be on the lookout for Logic, which has escaped Redmond, and is to be considered armed and dangerous. Film at eleven. kashii: