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#1
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Greetings,
My best friend is constantly raiding my computer. He will take files and send to himself, etc. I have password protected my account, however, he still finds a way to move around the password and get into my computer. PLEASE HELP! -- Christopher |
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#2
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* Christopher <Christopher@discussions.microsoft.com>:
> Greetings, > > My best friend is constantly raiding my computer. He will take files and > send to himself, etc. I have password protected my account, however, he > still finds a way to move around the password and get into my computer. > PLEASE HELP! 1. Smack friend soundly about the head and explain that if you do this again you'll beat the crap out of them. 2. Change your password to something harder to guess 3. 2 will be useless by the way if your running windows 9x 4. Do a complete virus and trojan scan incase your so called friend installed something that is helping him break into your computer. 5. If 4 finds something repeat the first step. Jason |
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#3
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Jason wrote:
> * Christopher <Christopher@discussions.microsoft.com>: >> Greetings, >> >> My best friend is constantly raiding my computer. He will take files >> and >> send to himself, etc. I have password protected my account, however, >> he still finds a way to move around the password and get into my >> computer. PLEASE HELP! > > 1. Smack friend soundly about the head and explain that if you do this > again you'll beat the crap out of them. > > 2. Change your password to something harder to guess > > 3. 2 will be useless by the way if your running windows 9x > > 4. Do a complete virus and trojan scan incase your so called friend > installed something that is helping him break into your computer. > > 5. If 4 finds something repeat the first step. > I like Jason's solutions, but the big piece of information you left out is "how is your friend getting *into* your computer"? If you really want help with this, post back with details about your XP Service Pack level, what access your friend has to the machine (physical or network), what antivirus and firewall software you are using, etc. Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
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#4
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Jason Wrote: > * Christopher Christopher@discussions.microsoft.com: > Greetings, > > My best friend is constantly raiding my computer. He will take files > and > send to himself, etc. I have password protected my account, however, > he > still finds a way to move around the password and get into my > computer. > PLEASE HELP! Jason, You can also set an administrtive password in the computers bios. The computer will not boot to XP untill the password is entered. DON'T FORGET THIS PASSWORD! Best, Treeman -- Treeman |
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#5
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Christopher wrote:
> Greetings, > > My best friend is constantly raiding my computer. He will take files and > send to himself, etc. I have password protected my account, however, he > still finds a way to move around the password and get into my computer. > PLEASE HELP! If your "best" friend is so inconsiderate and disrespectful of your property and privacy, perhaps you should re-examine this alleged "friendship." In the meantime, learn to secure your computer. Have you secured the built-in Administrator account? The standard security practice is to rename the account, set a strong password on it, and use it only to create another account for regular use, reserving the Administrator account as a "back door" in case something corrupts your regular account(s). Make sure that a password is required to log on to the computer; disable any automatic logins. Change your own account's password to something that your "friend" cannot guess. If your "friend" has an account on your computer, ensure that it's a limited account. HOW TO Create and Configure User Accounts in Windows XP http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;279783 Ensure that your hard drive is formatted in the NTFS file system and use fole/folder permissions to control access to your hard drive. HOW TO Set, View, Change, or Remove File and Folder Permissions http://support.microsoft.com/default...;en-us;q308418 HOW TO Set, View, Change, or Remove Special Permissions for Files and Folders http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;[LN];Q308419 HOW TO Set the My Documents Folder as Private in Windows XP http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;298399 Of course, if you have WinXP Pro, you can encrypt the desired files/folders. Best Practices for Encrypting File System http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;223316 -- Bruce Chambers Help us help you: http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don't ever count on having both at once. - RAH |
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#6
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I'd just add that no Windows password is of any great use to stop someone who knows what they're doing. If faced with a logon-password I'd just boot with a Knoppix CD. The BIOS password is a lot more secure becasue your 'friend' would need to open the case to reset that - If that is likely you can get case padlocks. (On a laptop, bios passwords are often not user-resettable, and loss of the password may involve sending the laptop for repair, so in that case be careful) |
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#7
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On Sun, 1 Jan 2006 06:18:01 -0800, "Christopher"
>My best friend is constantly raiding my computer. He will take files and >send to himself, etc. I have password protected my account, however, he >still finds a way to move around the password and get into my computer. Is he accessing the system locally or remotely? If you allow physical access, you're screwed, basically. Do not allow physical access... there are things that will try to protect against such scenarios, such as passwords etc. and there's a free downloadable utility to make it easier to blow away all changes on startup, suitable for "public" (kiosk) PCs, but neither approach is solid. If he's accessing the PC via network, WiFi or Internet, then so can any other dork (with the exception of wired LAN, which is back within the "don't allow physical access" bubble). Your problems are large indeed, if any dork or bot can access your PC from WiFi or Internet. >---------- ----- ---- --- -- - - - - Don't pay malware vendors - boycott Sony >---------- ----- ---- --- -- - - - - |
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#8
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"Christopher" <Christopher@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:F9230916-7850-4D3D-86BD-5338EDC41F39@microsoft.com... > Greetings, > > My best friend is constantly raiding my computer. He will take files and > send to himself, etc. I have password protected my account, however, he > still finds a way to move around the password and get into my computer. > PLEASE HELP! > -- > Christopher You need to find a new friend. Bobby |
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