electriic ink 1 Report post Posted February 8, 2006 Popular Applications Are Creating Holes In Your OS Nearly every computer owner nowadays knows how to keep their computer safe by running regualar virus scans and keeping spyware scanners up to date. Well researchers at Prinston University say that this is not enough. They have found many popular applications which open doors up to allow various attacks. Among the discovered culprits were Adobe Photoshop and AOL Instant Messengar. Fortuneately, these products which had the worst written code out of all those which were found, have fixed their code. Earlier this month, Ed Felten who is a professor of computer science and public affairs, responded by saying: " No application should be considered completely safe"However, none of these vuneralbilites can be exploited over the web but require local access to the machine; it goes to show that even the most conscientious of computer users are ultimately at the mercy of the programs they use. LEARN MORE: http://www.neoseeker.com/news/5347-popular-applications-drilling-holes-in-your-os/ Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sxyloverboy 0 Report post Posted February 8, 2006 wow this is pretty intresting. ill be sure to check it out. im glad it says that photoshoped fixed their problems. but this is kinda stupid. i heard something about msn messenger too one time. i think messengers are a vulnerable more easily than other programs. anyways thanks for sharing this. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Cool_Freaker 0 Report post Posted February 8, 2006 Yeah, shows you can never be too careful. Start-up programs are a pain too - and if they're making security holes, I'd be damned if I ever allowed anything to run on startup. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
amhso 0 Report post Posted February 9, 2006 yeah just lightening your startup and decrease a great ammount of holes. and you can always have a faster startup...just makes using the computer more fun. most of the applications that "create" security holes are the ones with just bad programming as those researchers had found. a big cause of this is that when programmers at a company begin programming, they follow bad syntax or don't want to fix it. eventually as they build onto the code they had already done...it's a big jumble of pieces of programming that causes ties in machines and just creates problems. If companies spent the time (and money) in which most cases they won't, to re code their programs more organized....they'd probably have less problems.just a lesson for all of you programmers out there......be neat from the start and follow correct syntax. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sammaye 0 Report post Posted February 9, 2006 oh no I aint updated my photoshop thou but I have photoshop cs (which aint been updated since I got it) does that mean im ok? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Cerebral Stasis 0 Report post Posted February 9, 2006 I wouldn't worry about it too much. If your Photoshop has worked alright thus far, chances are they will for awhile yet. I'm not exactly sure what kind of holes are being referred to by this guy; security holes, code holes, or what? Regardless, I'm perfectly willing to give my favorite application developers time to fix the errors with patches instead of going on a fuming rant about how the program wasn't perfect the first time. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
delivi 0 Report post Posted February 9, 2006 I agree with Cerebral Stasis, I cannot let the Application get a bad name the application developers will definitely develop the required patches if any such problems really exixted. How can anyone just leave using applications like Photoshop which has become a part of our life and I like to spend hours on it. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
epox 0 Report post Posted February 20, 2006 i think you have all the reason, all computers are vulnerable, even more if you run pirate applications from the internet via p2p software, often, i'm afraid to install several programs i download from the net, and that's because if a program gets to trash my computer i have a lot of information, and also it means to reconfigure your system and that is an expensive time task.now i have a good antivirus, or i think it, at least, it shows advertencies from a hacker that wants to get-in into my computer, and almost forgot, i have activated the system recovery option in my os, so when something stupid happends in my machine, i simply recover the system to the last registration point where the system was perfect, but sometimes it doesn't work, so i open the systemworks by symantec and perform all the tasks it ask, it has saved me a lot of times to have to reconfigure my system, and off cours a lot of time and suffering. at last all the methods mencioned below doesn' work, i take the way of pain, restart the system, reinstall all the software, go back into trap 17 and remember my user name an my password to the browser, do the same thing with other site, reinstall all the windows patches, reconfigure my mail client and all that things that now i can't remember.at last, i would like to know how a bad software can make holes in your OS, so i would like if someone teach me about it, thanks! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bladeron 0 Report post Posted February 20, 2006 this is quite an interesting topic and after having read the article i kinda feel insecure with my internet security suite that i m using at presenthowever, i do think that internet applicatiosn like messengers and p2p file sharing progs, browsers are more vulnerable than softwares that do not directly connect to the internetcoz such softwares are updated regularly and i must believe that they try to fix these loop holes in their software Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
nelarozi 0 Report post Posted February 20, 2006 I didn't know that applications create holes in my os. I was sure i am pretty save with my NOD32+ ZoneAlarm combination but now i see i am not Is there maybe a program that fixes this problem or maybe someone can post the most dangerus applicatons cos i am really worried that someone could hack my computer through my Adobe Plz post As Soon as posible ! TNX Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kioku 0 Report post Posted February 21, 2006 No application should be considered completely safeI cannot possibly explain in words how true that is. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
inyourarms 0 Report post Posted February 21, 2006 That's interesting and all but I'm not gonna stop using my computer or AIM or whatever... if I get virus, I get a virus. Whatever I swear viruses were just invented so the anti-virus people can make some money lol Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Hamtaro 0 Report post Posted February 22, 2006 You know, you're more than likely right about that. I've heard my dad say that before about viruses. Anyway, I don't have Photoshop (mainly because I stink at graphic designing) and I use Gaim instead of AIM. No matter what kind of hole it creates, I'm still going to use it. Regardless of what OS you're using, or security suite, you're going to have some sort of hole in your OS when you connect to the Internet. Also, I never consider all the applications I have to be completely safe, I always scan the files that I download with a virus scanner (which still may miss some). Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Kioku 0 Report post Posted February 22, 2006 Scanning isn't always 100% safe, though. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
amhso 0 Report post Posted February 22, 2006 you guys are getting a difference here. virii and holes are different. virii are made by others to damage your system. holes are not from malicious intent. when photoshop edits itself into the registry and whatnot, it probably alters some settings that just make your system more VULNERABLE...not necessarily damaging the OS itself. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites