Hi All
anybody out there using awstats to monitor website statistics?
i started using this to monitor the usage of a client's site
last months stats went well, however when running this month's stats the
awstats database files don't update
i follow awstats FAQ-COM500 : HOW CAN I RESET ALL MY
Run:
`netstat -ano |findstr 161`
See if something else is running on that port...
From: Phil Hershey [mailto:phers...@agia.com]
Sent: Sunday, October 09, 2011 7:56 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: SNMP Service Fails to Start - Instantly
Howdy, All.
Have a problem on a 2003 R2 64-bit
It's worth noting that MalwareBytes is not an antivirus product. It is,
however, an excellent protecter/cleaner against modern Trojans and rogue
antivirus products.
From: Micheal Espinola Jr [mailto:michealespin...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, October 07, 2011 1:20 PM
To: NT System Admin
On Sun, Oct 9, 2011 at 12:23 PM, Alex Eckelberry
alex.eckelbe...@gfi.com wrote:
It’s worth noting that MalwareBytes is not an antivirus product. It is,
however, an excellent protecter/cleaner against modern Trojans and rogue
antivirus products.
And the difference between these two things
FWIW, in some circles its considered an AV product. I hear it coming-up
more and more as a point of discussion amongst engineers.
--
Espi
On Sun, Oct 9, 2011 at 9:23 AM, Alex Eckelberry alex.eckelbe...@gfi.comwrote:
It’s worth noting that MalwareBytes is not an antivirus product. It
+1
--
Espi
On Sun, Oct 9, 2011 at 10:27 AM, Ben Scott mailvor...@gmail.com wrote:
And the difference between these two things is...?
Viruses are largely obsolete anyway. Between ubiquitous network
connectivity and autorun, nobody needs to bother. Today's injection
vectors are
Hmmm Take a look at the Wildlist, which is the list of currently verified
viruses. There's still a lot of nasty stuff out there.
http://www.wildlist.org/WildList/201108.txt
We see plenty of viruses out there, and relying on a product like Malwarebytes
as your only line of defense is a
Viruses (true file infectors) like Sality, Virut, XPAJ, xpiro, murofet,
Mabezat and a few other true viruses are still quite common which
Malwarebytes cannot deal with.
Mabezat usually hauls in a variant of zbot/zues which is after banking/CC
info...
Malwarebytes might see the zbot files from
Reactive AV is being phased out of our XenApp systems next week. We are going
to maintain a sleeping AV component and do a deep scan once a week. Realtime
monitoring is being turned off and we will rely entirely on the application
management suite. We are not doing this blithely - currently app
What's the name of the sleeping AV component?
This thread is of particular interest since I'm plannning to pilot a
VDI deployment and a few engineers have mentioned the need to not have
local AV protection any longer. I tend to err on the side of caution,
but it's a persuading assertion; either
We are just going to continue using Trend, just with realtime monitoring
disabled. It will just do a scan once a week. But we could use any AV for that
(personally I would not have chosen Trend).
The heavy work is going to be done by AppSense Application Manager. Its
greylisting technique
I don't know how kz20fl does that, but in the case of Vipre, for example, it
would simply be turning off the on-access scanning, and strictly using the
on-demand scan, which can be scheduled or run manually.
I have to agree with Alex and Tammy; there's still plenty of virus vectors out
there,
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