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Para los usuarios de Ad-Aware

02/02/2004 - 12:05 por Verónica B. | Informe spam
Hola a todos,

He recibido el siguiente informe sobre Ad-Aware:

saludos
Verónica B.


The Eye


-
-

Issue 1.7

February 1, 2004


-
-

In This Issue

Thank You!

Reliving The Past, One Worm At a Time

Welcome To The Team!



Ad-aware Cloak

Notes From the Editor

Question & Answer Section

Send Us Your Questions

Printable Version

Thank You!

Our campaign to donate $1.00 USD to the www.childhood.org for every new
registered customer between December 1st, 2003 and January 6th, 2004 was a
resounding success and generated $15,084.00 USD. We would like to thank
everyone who made our donation possible, and firmly believe that together we
made a significant difference. This will provide a tangible aide to the
World Childhood Foundation’s mission to defend the rights of the child to a
secure childhood and, in particular, to work for better living conditions
for children at risk all over the world.

Lavasoft will continue to support good works like the World Childhood
Foundation, because it is something we feel strongly about. To be part of
the world community means that we not only be an ethical company, but that
we also actively participate in making this world a better place to live.



Ann - Christine Åkerlund

CEO, Lavasoft (Nicolas Stark Computing AB



Reliving The Past, One Worm At a Time
Aaron Hulett - Chief Research Officer - Lavasoft Research & Development



By now you've at least heard about the latest worm flying around the
Internet. If you've updated to the latest reference file, Ad-aware detects
it as Win32.MMail.A. More commonly referred to as MyDoom, this worm spreads
in the usual way by searching your computer for email addresses and sending
itself to them. We've seen this type of worm before. Many times, in fact.
And when they emerge, the security experts make their way to the airwaves,
telling of how they spread rapidly, and that users need to update their
virus definitions in order to block it.

The industry reacted quickly to this worm, with definitions available
within hours of its discovery. But yet, the worm flew around and became the
biggest worm to ever spread across the Internet. So what happened? Is
there still a large portion of users without updated antivirus software?
Maybe. But I think there's a very fundamental thing everyone's missing that
actually has the best chance of preventing a computer from becoming infected
in the first place.

Let's start with a very simple question: In your defenses, such as
antivirus software, antitrojan software, firewall software, and etc., which
do you consider your first line of defense? Antivirus software is a good
first line of defense in that when possibly malicious code enters the
system, the antivirus program can stop it dead in its tracks and prevent it
from spreading. The antitrojan software has the same effect. And your
firewall prevents malicious users from gaining unauthorized access to your
system.

But, after this last worm spread, and I looked around various online forums,
I noticed something was missing. A very big piece of the puzzle. The one
piece that has the largest influence on preventing things like viruses and
worms from entering the computer and doing anything in the first place.

So what was your answer to the question? If you didn't say the first line
of defense was you, the user of the computer, it's time to rethink your
security strategy.

Users hold the largest chance of keeping malicious code like viruses and
worms off their systems by one extremely easy method, and many fail to
exercise it. Instead, they rely on their antivirus program to catch
anything suspicious. The method only takes a few seconds to do, and it can
prove wonders in preventing system infection and preventing the spread of
such items. If you receive something in your email, whether it's from
someone you know or someone you don't, and it contains an attachment, and it
looks suspicious in any way, your very next step should be to click Delete.

How do you tell the difference between a suspicious and non-suspicious
email? The days of judging this by the sender and the sender only are long
gone. Most worms will use your friends' email addresses for sending, in an
effort to get you to open it. Your first step should be to see if it just
looks strange. You know your friends better than anyone else. Look at the
writing style of the email. Does it look like something they'd write? If
not, then proceed with caution.

A method that some use when sending attachments is to send an email
beforehand, letting the other person know they're about to send an
attachment, along with what type of file it is and what it contains. This
can help greatly in figuring out if something's safe or not, but of course,
don't go on this alone. Perhaps in an Instant Message or a telephone call
one could let the other know of the pending email containing the attachment.

One of the best things you can do is trust your instinct. If it looks
suspicious, delete it. You can always ask the sender what they sent and
have them resend if necessary. But if you do believe it's safe to open, and
it turns out not to be, then make sure your next layer of security, such as
your antivirus software, is updated and monitoring, and be prepared with
backups of your important files in case that layer of security fails.








-
-

Welcome To The Team!

From Team Lavasoft



Lavasoft would like to welcome the following new team members!






Fernando Francisco

VP Strategy & Business Development
Stefan Lundström

Software Development

Research & Development









-
-

Ad-aware Cloak

Stefan Lundström - Software Development - Lavasoft Research & Development



Ad-aware Cloak 1.0 is designed to allow Ad-aware to open fully when there
are items on the system which close Ad-aware when it attempts to start, such
as some CoolWebSearch variants. To use Ad-aware Cloak, save it to your
system, and run the program before opening Ad-aware. Once Ad-aware Cloak
opens, click "Activate Cloak" and then open Ad-aware and scan as normal.
When you are done using Ad-aware, close Ad-aware Cloak.



Further Information



Download the free Ad-aware Cloak program:



http://www.lavasoftnews.com/downloads/AAWCloak.exe








-
-

Notes From the Editor



Thank You for Supporting Our Decision



Our decision to leave the COAST organization has generated a considerable
amount of positive feedback and we would like thank everyone who took the
time to write to us with their support.

Some of you who expressed concern that this could affect the future
development of Ad-aware can be assured that nothing will stop us from what
we do best. We will continue this year stronger then ever with a major
update of Ad-aware and of course many other new interesting projects. More
on this to come soon...



We've Moved!



Lavasoft’s corporate offices have moved and are now located in beautiful
Åsarp/Falköping:

Our new address is
Nicolas Stark Computing AB (Lavasoft)
Centrumvàgen 39 (visiting address)
P.O Box 80
52043 Åsarp
Sweden



Careers at Lavasoft

Would you like to work with the protection of everyone's privacy on the
Internet? We promise that working for Lavasoft will be one of the most
interesting and enjoyable times in your life, especially now when our
company is in a period of expansion and growth.

Nicolas Stark Computing AB has two immediate openings for highly skilled
Software Engineers to join the Ad-aware Development Team at our company
headquarters in Åsarp, Sweden.

Read more at http://lavasoft.element5.com/contactus/career/








-
-

Question & Answer Section

Aaron Hulett - Chief Research Officer - Lavasoft Research & Development



"Previously you had instructions on how to change email addresses. What
came of that?"


After putting the system online and observing some behaviors, we quickly
learned that this mechanism jeopardized the security of the email lists. It
allowed for changing email addresses with no form of verification that the
change was authentic. Since this time, we've been evaluating other methods
of accomplishing this, so here's the procedure.



Visit the Lavasoft News website at http://www.lavasoftnews.com and click the
unsubscribe link. Enter the email address you need to unsubscribe here, and
click Submit. Then, back at the main page, enter your new email address
into the subscribe box, and click Submit. You'll receive confirmation
emails at both addresses, and you'll need to click the link in both emails
to complete the process.







-
-

Send Us Your Questions


We're looking for questions you feel should be answered in future editions
of The Eye. Submit your questions to the Editor here and we'll answer the
frequently asked questions.



Note: The Editor email address is not for support questions requiring a
response. You're more than welcome to post support questions at our Support
Forums, or for users of the registered versions of Ad-aware (Plus and
Professional), you also have the option to email our Support Department.






-
-

If you have any questions about anything found in this newsletter, please
contact us at our Support Forums.



You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking here.



The Eye, brought to you by Lavasoft News



© 2004 Nicolas Stark Computing AB

All rights reserved. Lavasoft and the Lavasoft logo are Registered
Trademarks of Nicolas Stark Computing AB. Registered
trademarks/servicemarks and

trademarks/servicemarks are those of their respective companies.

Preguntas similare

Leer las respuestas

#16 Anonimo
03/02/2004 - 21:13 | Informe spam
Hola a todos,

He recibido el siguiente informe sobre Ad-Aware:

saludos
Verónica B.


The Eye





-
-

Issue 1.7

February 1, 2004





-
-

In This Issue

Thank You!

Reliving The Past, One Worm At a Time

Welcome To The Team!



Ad-aware Cloak

Notes From the Editor

Question & Answer Section

Send Us Your Questions

Printable Version

Thank You!

Our campaign to donate $1.00 USD to the


www.childhood.org for every new
registered customer between December 1st, 2003 and


January 6th, 2004 was a
resounding success and generated $15,084.00 USD. We


would like to thank
everyone who made our donation possible, and firmly


believe that together we
made a significant difference. This will provide a


tangible aide to the
World Childhood Foundation's mission to defend the


rights of the child to a
secure childhood and, in particular, to work for better


living conditions
for children at risk all over the world.

Lavasoft will continue to support good works like the


World Childhood
Foundation, because it is something we feel strongly


about. To be part of
the world community means that we not only be an ethical


company, but that
we also actively participate in making this world a


better place to live.



Ann - Christine Åkerlund

CEO, Lavasoft (Nicolas Stark Computing AB

-


-


Reliving The Past, One Worm At a Time
Aaron Hulett - Chief Research Officer - Lavasoft


Research & Development



By now you've at least heard about the latest worm


flying around the
Internet. If you've updated to the latest reference


file, Ad-aware detects
it as Win32.MMail.A. More commonly referred to as


MyDoom, this worm spreads
in the usual way by searching your computer for email


addresses and sending
itself to them. We've seen this type of worm before.


Many times, in fact.
And when they emerge, the security experts make their


way to the airwaves,
telling of how they spread rapidly, and that users need


to update their
virus definitions in order to block it.

The industry reacted quickly to this worm, with


definitions available
within hours of its discovery. But yet, the worm flew


around and became the
biggest worm to ever spread across the Internet. So


what happened? Is
there still a large portion of users without updated


antivirus software?
Maybe. But I think there's a very fundamental thing


everyone's missing that
actually has the best chance of preventing a computer


from becoming infected
in the first place.

Let's start with a very simple question: In your


defenses, such as
antivirus software, antitrojan software, firewall


software, and etc., which
do you consider your first line of defense? Antivirus


software is a good
first line of defense in that when possibly malicious


code enters the
system, the antivirus program can stop it dead in its


tracks and prevent it
from spreading. The antitrojan software has the same


effect. And your
firewall prevents malicious users from gaining


unauthorized access to your
system.

But, after this last worm spread, and I looked around


various online forums,
I noticed something was missing. A very big piece of


the puzzle. The one
piece that has the largest influence on preventing


things like viruses and
worms from entering the computer and doing anything in


the first place.

So what was your answer to the question? If you didn't


say the first line
of defense was you, the user of the computer, it's time


to rethink your
security strategy.

Users hold the largest chance of keeping malicious code


like viruses and
worms off their systems by one extremely easy method,


and many fail to
exercise it. Instead, they rely on their antivirus


program to catch
anything suspicious. The method only takes a few


seconds to do, and it can
prove wonders in preventing system infection and


preventing the spread of
such items. If you receive something in your email,


whether it's from
someone you know or someone you don't, and it contains


an attachment, and it
looks suspicious in any way, your very next step should


be to click Delete.

How do you tell the difference between a suspicious and


non-suspicious
email? The days of judging this by the sender and the


sender only are long
gone. Most worms will use your friends' email addresses


for sending, in an
effort to get you to open it. Your first step should be


to see if it just
looks strange. You know your friends better than anyone


else. Look at the
writing style of the email. Does it look like something


they'd write? If
not, then proceed with caution.

A method that some use when sending attachments is to


send an email
beforehand, letting the other person know they're about


to send an
attachment, along with what type of file it is and what


it contains. This
can help greatly in figuring out if something's safe or


not, but of course,
don't go on this alone. Perhaps in an Instant Message


or a telephone call
one could let the other know of the pending email


containing the attachment.

One of the best things you can do is trust your


instinct. If it looks
suspicious, delete it. You can always ask the sender


what they sent and
have them resend if necessary. But if you do believe


it's safe to open, and
it turns out not to be, then make sure your next layer


of security, such as
your antivirus software, is updated and monitoring, and


be prepared with
backups of your important files in case that layer of


security fails.











-
-

Welcome To The Team!

From Team Lavasoft



Lavasoft would like to welcome the following new team


members!






Fernando Francisco

VP Strategy & Business Development
Stefan Lundström

Software Development

Research & Development












-
-

Ad-aware Cloak

Stefan Lundström - Software Development - Lavasoft


Research & Development



Ad-aware Cloak 1.0 is designed to allow Ad-aware to open


fully when there
are items on the system which close Ad-aware when it


attempts to start, such
as some CoolWebSearch variants. To use Ad-aware Cloak,


save it to your
system, and run the program before opening Ad-aware.


Once Ad-aware Cloak
opens, click "Activate Cloak" and then open Ad-aware and


scan as normal.
When you are done using Ad-aware, close Ad-aware Cloak.



Further Information



Download the free Ad-aware Cloak program:



http://www.lavasoftnews.com/downloads/AAWCloak.exe











-
-

Notes From the Editor



Thank You for Supporting Our Decision



Our decision to leave the COAST organization has


generated a considerable
amount of positive feedback and we would like thank


everyone who took the
time to write to us with their support.

Some of you who expressed concern that this could affect


the future
development of Ad-aware can be assured that nothing will


stop us from what
we do best. We will continue this year stronger then


ever with a major
update of Ad-aware and of course many other new


interesting projects. More
on this to come soon...



We've Moved!



Lavasoft's corporate offices have moved and are now


located in beautiful
Åsarp/Falköping:

Our new address is
Nicolas Stark Computing AB (Lavasoft)
Centrumvàgen 39 (visiting address)
P.O Box 80
52043 Åsarp
Sweden



Careers at Lavasoft

Would you like to work with the protection of everyone's


privacy on the
Internet? We promise that working for Lavasoft will be


one of the most
interesting and enjoyable times in your life, especially


now when our
company is in a period of expansion and growth.

Nicolas Stark Computing AB has two immediate openings


for highly skilled
Software Engineers to join the Ad-aware Development Team


at our company
headquarters in Åsarp, Sweden.

Read more at


http://lavasoft.element5.com/contactus/career/











-
-

Question & Answer Section

Aaron Hulett - Chief Research Officer - Lavasoft


Research & Development



"Previously you had instructions on how to change email


addresses. What
came of that?"


After putting the system online and observing some


behaviors, we quickly
learned that this mechanism jeopardized the security of


the email lists. It
allowed for changing email addresses with no form of


verification that the
change was authentic. Since this time, we've been


evaluating other methods
of accomplishing this, so here's the procedure.



Visit the Lavasoft News website at


http://www.lavasoftnews.com and click the
unsubscribe link. Enter the email address you need to


unsubscribe here, and
click Submit. Then, back at the main page, enter your


new email address
into the subscribe box, and click Submit. You'll


receive confirmation
emails at both addresses, and you'll need to click the


link in both emails
to complete the process.










-
-

Send Us Your Questions


We're looking for questions you feel should be answered


in future editions
of The Eye. Submit your questions to the Editor here and


we'll answer the
frequently asked questions.



Note: The Editor email address is not for support


questions requiring a
response. You're more than welcome to post support


questions at our Support
Forums, or for users of the registered versions of Ad-


aware (Plus and
Professional), you also have the option to email our


Support Department.









-
-

If you have any questions about anything found in this


newsletter, please
contact us at our Support Forums.



You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking here.



The Eye, brought to you by Lavasoft News



© 2004 Nicolas Stark Computing AB

All rights reserved. Lavasoft and the Lavasoft logo are


Registered
Trademarks of Nicolas Stark Computing AB. Registered
trademarks/servicemarks and

trademarks/servicemarks are those of their respective


companies.



.

Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
#17 Anonimo
03/02/2004 - 21:13 | Informe spam
:D)
Dejando de lado la política, debemos reconocer que es el


idioma más
utilizado en la Tierra s.e u o.(por lo menos por el


momento) y más aún en
Informática, siempre y cuando se utilicen sistemas


operativos nacidos en el
Hemisferio Norte, no?

saludos
Verónica B.


"Palel" escribió en el


mensaje
news:
:-) "de todos es sabido" que yo no me llevo con el




imperialismo :-)))))))
Pero bueno, "a fuerza de palos" y necesidad puedo




defenderme más o menos
leyéndolo, informáticamente hablando y desde
luego que agradezco toda traducción para no tener que




defenderme de nada
ni de nadie ;-)

Saludos, Palel
[MS MVP]
http://www.infonegocio.com/luzylar/informatica.htm
®El Rincón del Navegante - http://www.luzylar.com

*** Consulta en el Foro específico:
news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso...lic.es.ie6





news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso...outlookexp
ress





news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso....windowsxp





news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso....windows98
... hay más, busca el que necesites.
__________________________________
"Verónica B." escribió




en el mensaje
news:
| Vamos Palel, no creo que no sepas inglés:)))






.

Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
#18 Verónica B.
03/02/2004 - 21:54 | Informe spam
anonymous, ya te estaba extrañando!


escribió en el mensaje
news:904201c3ea92$2d3be290$

:D)
Dejando de lado la política, debemos reconocer que es el


idioma más
utilizado en la Tierra s.e u o.(por lo menos por el


momento) y más aún en
Informática, siempre y cuando se utilicen sistemas


operativos nacidos en el
Hemisferio Norte, no?

saludos
Verónica B.


"Palel" escribió en el


mensaje
news:
:-) "de todos es sabido" que yo no me llevo con el




imperialismo :-)))))))
Pero bueno, "a fuerza de palos" y necesidad puedo




defenderme más o menos
leyéndolo, informáticamente hablando y desde
luego que agradezco toda traducción para no tener que




defenderme de nada
ni de nadie ;-)

Saludos, Palel
[MS MVP]
http://www.infonegocio.com/luzylar/informatica.htm
®El Rincón del Navegante - http://www.luzylar.com

*** Consulta en el Foro específico:
news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso...lic.es.ie6





news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso...outlookexp
ress





news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso....windowsxp





news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso....windows98
... hay más, busca el que necesites.
__________________________________
"Verónica B." escribió




en el mensaje
news:
| Vamos Palel, no creo que no sepas inglés:)))






.

Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
#19 Verónica B.
03/02/2004 - 21:56 | Informe spam
Estás errado: los programas espía son OT ahora?
ubícate, no, mejor dicho ubicáte please, ya que corregís, hacélo bien.


escribió en el mensaje
news:904101c3ea92$201ecc80$

Hola a todos,

He recibido el siguiente informe sobre Ad-Aware:

saludos
Verónica B.


The Eye





-
-

Issue 1.7

February 1, 2004





-
-

In This Issue

Thank You!

Reliving The Past, One Worm At a Time

Welcome To The Team!



Ad-aware Cloak

Notes From the Editor

Question & Answer Section

Send Us Your Questions

Printable Version

Thank You!

Our campaign to donate $1.00 USD to the


www.childhood.org for every new
registered customer between December 1st, 2003 and


January 6th, 2004 was a
resounding success and generated $15,084.00 USD. We


would like to thank
everyone who made our donation possible, and firmly


believe that together we
made a significant difference. This will provide a


tangible aide to the
World Childhood Foundation's mission to defend the


rights of the child to a
secure childhood and, in particular, to work for better


living conditions
for children at risk all over the world.

Lavasoft will continue to support good works like the


World Childhood
Foundation, because it is something we feel strongly


about. To be part of
the world community means that we not only be an ethical


company, but that
we also actively participate in making this world a


better place to live.



Ann - Christine Åkerlund

CEO, Lavasoft (Nicolas Stark Computing AB

-


-


Reliving The Past, One Worm At a Time
Aaron Hulett - Chief Research Officer - Lavasoft


Research & Development



By now you've at least heard about the latest worm


flying around the
Internet. If you've updated to the latest reference


file, Ad-aware detects
it as Win32.MMail.A. More commonly referred to as


MyDoom, this worm spreads
in the usual way by searching your computer for email


addresses and sending
itself to them. We've seen this type of worm before.


Many times, in fact.
And when they emerge, the security experts make their


way to the airwaves,
telling of how they spread rapidly, and that users need


to update their
virus definitions in order to block it.

The industry reacted quickly to this worm, with


definitions available
within hours of its discovery. But yet, the worm flew


around and became the
biggest worm to ever spread across the Internet. So


what happened? Is
there still a large portion of users without updated


antivirus software?
Maybe. But I think there's a very fundamental thing


everyone's missing that
actually has the best chance of preventing a computer


from becoming infected
in the first place.

Let's start with a very simple question: In your


defenses, such as
antivirus software, antitrojan software, firewall


software, and etc., which
do you consider your first line of defense? Antivirus


software is a good
first line of defense in that when possibly malicious


code enters the
system, the antivirus program can stop it dead in its


tracks and prevent it
from spreading. The antitrojan software has the same


effect. And your
firewall prevents malicious users from gaining


unauthorized access to your
system.

But, after this last worm spread, and I looked around


various online forums,
I noticed something was missing. A very big piece of


the puzzle. The one
piece that has the largest influence on preventing


things like viruses and
worms from entering the computer and doing anything in


the first place.

So what was your answer to the question? If you didn't


say the first line
of defense was you, the user of the computer, it's time


to rethink your
security strategy.

Users hold the largest chance of keeping malicious code


like viruses and
worms off their systems by one extremely easy method,


and many fail to
exercise it. Instead, they rely on their antivirus


program to catch
anything suspicious. The method only takes a few


seconds to do, and it can
prove wonders in preventing system infection and


preventing the spread of
such items. If you receive something in your email,


whether it's from
someone you know or someone you don't, and it contains


an attachment, and it
looks suspicious in any way, your very next step should


be to click Delete.

How do you tell the difference between a suspicious and


non-suspicious
email? The days of judging this by the sender and the


sender only are long
gone. Most worms will use your friends' email addresses


for sending, in an
effort to get you to open it. Your first step should be


to see if it just
looks strange. You know your friends better than anyone


else. Look at the
writing style of the email. Does it look like something


they'd write? If
not, then proceed with caution.

A method that some use when sending attachments is to


send an email
beforehand, letting the other person know they're about


to send an
attachment, along with what type of file it is and what


it contains. This
can help greatly in figuring out if something's safe or


not, but of course,
don't go on this alone. Perhaps in an Instant Message


or a telephone call
one could let the other know of the pending email


containing the attachment.

One of the best things you can do is trust your


instinct. If it looks
suspicious, delete it. You can always ask the sender


what they sent and
have them resend if necessary. But if you do believe


it's safe to open, and
it turns out not to be, then make sure your next layer


of security, such as
your antivirus software, is updated and monitoring, and


be prepared with
backups of your important files in case that layer of


security fails.











-
-

Welcome To The Team!

From Team Lavasoft



Lavasoft would like to welcome the following new team


members!






Fernando Francisco

VP Strategy & Business Development
Stefan Lundström

Software Development

Research & Development












-
-

Ad-aware Cloak

Stefan Lundström - Software Development - Lavasoft


Research & Development



Ad-aware Cloak 1.0 is designed to allow Ad-aware to open


fully when there
are items on the system which close Ad-aware when it


attempts to start, such
as some CoolWebSearch variants. To use Ad-aware Cloak,


save it to your
system, and run the program before opening Ad-aware.


Once Ad-aware Cloak
opens, click "Activate Cloak" and then open Ad-aware and


scan as normal.
When you are done using Ad-aware, close Ad-aware Cloak.



Further Information



Download the free Ad-aware Cloak program:



http://www.lavasoftnews.com/downloads/AAWCloak.exe











-
-

Notes From the Editor



Thank You for Supporting Our Decision



Our decision to leave the COAST organization has


generated a considerable
amount of positive feedback and we would like thank


everyone who took the
time to write to us with their support.

Some of you who expressed concern that this could affect


the future
development of Ad-aware can be assured that nothing will


stop us from what
we do best. We will continue this year stronger then


ever with a major
update of Ad-aware and of course many other new


interesting projects. More
on this to come soon...



We've Moved!



Lavasoft's corporate offices have moved and are now


located in beautiful
Åsarp/Falköping:

Our new address is
Nicolas Stark Computing AB (Lavasoft)
Centrumvàgen 39 (visiting address)
P.O Box 80
52043 Åsarp
Sweden



Careers at Lavasoft

Would you like to work with the protection of everyone's


privacy on the
Internet? We promise that working for Lavasoft will be


one of the most
interesting and enjoyable times in your life, especially


now when our
company is in a period of expansion and growth.

Nicolas Stark Computing AB has two immediate openings


for highly skilled
Software Engineers to join the Ad-aware Development Team


at our company
headquarters in Åsarp, Sweden.

Read more at


http://lavasoft.element5.com/contactus/career/











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-

Question & Answer Section

Aaron Hulett - Chief Research Officer - Lavasoft


Research & Development



"Previously you had instructions on how to change email


addresses. What
came of that?"


After putting the system online and observing some


behaviors, we quickly
learned that this mechanism jeopardized the security of


the email lists. It
allowed for changing email addresses with no form of


verification that the
change was authentic. Since this time, we've been


evaluating other methods
of accomplishing this, so here's the procedure.



Visit the Lavasoft News website at


http://www.lavasoftnews.com and click the
unsubscribe link. Enter the email address you need to


unsubscribe here, and
click Submit. Then, back at the main page, enter your


new email address
into the subscribe box, and click Submit. You'll


receive confirmation
emails at both addresses, and you'll need to click the


link in both emails
to complete the process.










-
-

Send Us Your Questions


We're looking for questions you feel should be answered


in future editions
of The Eye. Submit your questions to the Editor here and


we'll answer the
frequently asked questions.



Note: The Editor email address is not for support


questions requiring a
response. You're more than welcome to post support


questions at our Support
Forums, or for users of the registered versions of Ad-


aware (Plus and
Professional), you also have the option to email our


Support Department.









-
-

If you have any questions about anything found in this


newsletter, please
contact us at our Support Forums.



You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking here.



The Eye, brought to you by Lavasoft News



© 2004 Nicolas Stark Computing AB

All rights reserved. Lavasoft and the Lavasoft logo are


Registered
Trademarks of Nicolas Stark Computing AB. Registered
trademarks/servicemarks and

trademarks/servicemarks are those of their respective


companies.



.

Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
#20 Palel
04/02/2004 - 19:32 | Informe spam
mucho peor que su "OT" es dejar todos los kb en la respuesta.
A los que se comportan como tú hace muchos años que ya les pusimos un nombre... a mí, personalmente, me aburres.

Palel
[MS MVP]
http://www.infonegocio.com/luzylar/informatica.htm
®El Rincón del Navegante - http://www.luzylar.com

*** Consulta en el Foro específico:
news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso...lic.es.ie6
news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso...ookexpress
news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso....windowsxp
news://msnews.microsoft.com/microso....windows98
... hay más, busca el que necesites.
__________________________________
escribió en el mensaje news:904101c3ea92$201ecc80$
Respuesta Responder a este mensaje
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