Posted: Mon May 01, 2006 9:45 am
Make sure you never have trouble with your computer again!forge wrote:come on, tell us, what will it do?
(Unless you decide to put things back on your hard drive, that is)
Make sure you never have trouble with your computer again!forge wrote:come on, tell us, what will it do?
come on, tell us, what will it do?[/quote]forge wrote:And people would fall for it. And people who fall for it deserve it. This is not 'Nam, this is computing, and there are rules... and if people don't follow them, they may get hurt..noisetonepause wrote:
"sudo rm -r /"
Type in your password at the prompt. The security holes have now been patched. Thank you for shopping.
gomi wrote: i work at a school, and let me tell you it is SO SO satisfying to
WIPE out all the students folders on ALL the drives
on ALL THE computers ALL at once with ard and good old rm -Rf *
Pitch Black wrote:gomi wrote: i work at a school, and let me tell you it is SO SO satisfying to
WIPE out all the students folders on ALL the drives
on ALL THE computers ALL at once with ard and good old rm -Rf *
so -Rf * = Really fucked, then?
gomi wrote:more fun to do rm -Rf
that way you get all the folders too
...man rm wrote: -f Attempt to remove the files without prompting for confirma-
tion, regardless of the file's permissions. If the file does
not exist, do not display a diagnostic message or modify the
exit status to reflect an error. The -f option overrides any
previous -i options.
...
-R Attempt to remove the file hierarchy rooted in each file
argument. The -R option implies the -d option. If the -i
option is specified, the user is prompted for confirmation
before each directory's contents are processed (as well as
before the attempt is made to remove the directory). If the
user does not respond affirmatively, the file hierarchy
rooted in that directory is skipped.
-r Equivalent to -R.
how do you know you haven't got a virus?shaneblyth wrote:dam my mac is permanently hooked to the net with no anitspyware or virus protection for the last 18 months
I am really scred now !.. Hey just checked.. what no virus on my machine ? why not ? tell me why not ? this is not fair..
Now 6 seconds is the world record to hook XP to the net with no antivirus and get infected.. I am still waiting at 18 months
Now where is the comparison guys ? There is none.
It is like the bird fly... it has to mutate to humans but it hasn't yet .. when we get a real virus that can infect my machine please let me know but this is just so much talk it is very silly and in the REAL WORLD scores a big fat zero.
All of those with no antivirus and a Mac related virus please reply ..
I am a computer technition.. I dont have a virus.. I did have a virus scanner on for 6 months for a laugh.. kept it up to date and it never ever found one. I know this is hard for PC users to get.. I use both systems daily so It took me a while to realise what the real story is..nolus wrote:how do you know you haven't got a virus?shaneblyth wrote:dam my mac is permanently hooked to the net with no anitspyware or virus protection for the last 18 months
I am really scred now !.. Hey just checked.. what no virus on my machine ? why not ? tell me why not ? this is not fair..
Now 6 seconds is the world record to hook XP to the net with no antivirus and get infected.. I am still waiting at 18 months
Now where is the comparison guys ? There is none.
It is like the bird fly... it has to mutate to humans but it hasn't yet .. when we get a real virus that can infect my machine please let me know but this is just so much talk it is very silly and in the REAL WORLD scores a big fat zero.
All of those with no antivirus and a Mac related virus please reply ..
*claps*
heh.If Goodin wanted to be reasonable or accurate, he could have written a story titled “Some Guy Double-Clicked a Trojan Horse Virus for Mac OS X but It Didn’t Actually Spread to Anyone Else”, but what kind of story would that be? OK, it’d be a true story, but it wouldn’t be a good story.
Who exactly is touting the Mac as “immune to such risks”? Goodin doesn’t
say, but his word is good enough for me. I’m sure whoever they are,
they’re experts.
I, on the other hand, had never been under the impression that the Mac
was either magically or technically “immune” or “invulnerable” to viruses,
Trojan horses, spyware, adware, malware, and so forth.
Good to see someone living in the real-worldDaines’s uninformed opinion that Macs were “invulnerable” to such attacks
indicates that he believed it was safe to download and open any random
file from the Internet,
Not really, I've been using PC's for 15 years and never once got infected by a virus. I used to routinely receive dodgy looking emails, but never felt tempted to run the attachments.shaneblyth wrote: .. kept it up to date and it never ever found one. I know this is hard for PC users to get....