Karla on Wednesday, January 22, 2014, 2:58:19 PM, you
(tbudl@thebat.dutaint.com) wrote:
I changed that and will be closely monitoring the
mail account.Malwarebytes free software has solved any
invader-related issues I've had from time to time over the years, and
I download
I downloaded the free version and performed a quick scan. A whole bunch of
items were detected Most of them have to do with the registry. Some are in
files I recognize, e.g., set up file from software the I have installed, and I
do not want to delete those.
Most of the setup file REGISTRY
Friday, January 24, 2014, 5:34:31 AM, you wrote:
Karla on Wednesday, January 22, 2014, 2:58:19 PM, you
(tbudl@thebat.dutaint.com) wrote:
I changed that and will be closely monitoring the
mail account.Malwarebytes free software has solved any
invader-related issues I've
On Friday, January 24, 2014, 12:23:43 PM, you (tbudl@thebat.dutaint.com) wrote:
Most of the setup file REGISTRY entries can be deleted as they are
just leftovers from the install process. As for files, it likes to
suggest uninstall files as being potentially dangerous. If you know
what the
Karla, on Wednesday, January 22, 2014, 2:58:19 PM, you
(tbudl@thebat.dutaint.com) wrote:
My default mode for finding any such issues is to run a Malwarebytes
scan on the computer. One of the things I've noticed in The Bat! is
that accessing AOL mail gives a message of an invalid
On Tuesday, January 21, 2014, 6:22:06 PM, you (tbudl@thebat.dutaint.com) wrote:
Gmail doesn't use self-signed certificates. You have an MITM attack
going on there, as Jernej already said. I have no way to tell if it is
malicious, or something friendly installed on your computer or
network.
Hi,
What can I do about it?
What would you do if someone raided your living room while you were
upstairs sleeping?
Treat it the same way.
--
Mit freundlichem Gruß
Alto Speckhardt
mailto:a...@treadstone79.de
Current version is 6.1.8 |
On Wednesday, January 22, 2014, 7:42:48 AM, you (tbudl@thebat.dutaint.com)
wrote:
What would you do if someone raided your living room while you were
upstairs sleeping?
Treat it the same way.
If someone raided my living room, I would call the police, then get a
boom and clean up the mess.
Wednesday, January 22, 2014, 11:15:54 AM, you wrote:
On Wednesday, January 22, 2014, 7:42:48 AM, you (tbudl@thebat.dutaint.com)
wrote:
What would you do if someone raided your living room while you were
upstairs sleeping?
Treat it the same way.
If someone raided my living room, I
Hi
On Tuesday 21 January 2014 at 6:46:25 AM, in
mid:1852040294.20140121014...@gmail.com, Leonard S. Berkowitz wrote:
Here is the entires set for one connect interval:
1/20/2014, 22:32:00: FETCH - receiving mail messages
1/20/2014, 22:32:00: FETCH - Connecting to POP3 server
Hi
On Sunday 19 January 2014 at 9:09:12 AM, in
mid:474345013.20140119040...@gmail.com, Leonard S. Berkowitz wrote:
I do not have Avast, rather Avira. Would your comment
still apply? Thanks.
It was just a suggestion, that the apparent MITM attack might be
nothing to worry about. Some
On Monday, January 20, 2014, 6:38:27 PM, you (tbudl@thebat.dutaint.com) wrote:
After the line about FETCH - Certificate S/N: 011E8403, algorithm:
RSA (512 bits), issued from 10/5/2012 10:19:13 PM to 9/30/2032
10:19:13 PM, for 1 host(s): pop.gmail.com. do you see a line about
owner or root?
On Saturday, January 18, 2014, 5:25:47 AM, you (tbudl@thebat.dutaint.com) wrote:
You said it. This line is just one of the 'TLS handshake' lines logged when
connecting to gmail servers. That is why it occurs every 3 minutes in
your case.
Thanks.
--
Leonard S. Berkowitz
Using The Bat!
On Saturday, January 18, 2014, 11:49:22 AM, you (tbudl@thebat.dutaint.com)
wrote:
However, the certificate it's announcing doesn't look right -
512bit RSA is insecure (even 1024bit RSA has been phased out), and
nobody issues end-entity certificates that are valid for more than 5
years, so
On Saturday, January 18, 2014, 12:39:53 PM, you (tbudl@thebat.dutaint.com)
wrote:
Maybe it is something to do with your anti-virus, like the Avast! root
certificate with no dates or serial number mentioned in my TLS
handshake? (Avast! does a man-in-the-middle attack so that it can
scan my
Hello Leonard,
FETCH - Certificate S/N: 011E8403, algorithm: RSA (512 bits), issued
from 10/5/2012 10:19:13 PM to 9/30/2032 10:19:13 PM, for 1 host(s):
pop.gmail.com.
It occurs repeatedly, every three minutes -- the frequency configured
for checking mail.
You said it. This line is just
On Friday, January 17, 2014, 23:10:24, Leonard S. Berkowitz wrote:
FETCH - Certificate S/N: 011E8403, algorithm: RSA (512 bits),
issued from 10/5/2012 10:19:13 PM to 9/30/2032 10:19:13 PM, for 1 host(s):
pop.gmail.com.
It occurs repeatedly, every three minutes -- the frequency configured
Hi
On Saturday 18 January 2014 at 4:49:22 PM, in
mid:26180520.20140118174...@eternallybored.org, Jernej Simoncic
wrote:
On Friday, January 17, 2014, 23:10:24, Leonard S.
Berkowitz wrote:
FETCH - Certificate S/N: 011E8403,
algorithm: RSA (512 bits),
issued from 10/5/2012 10:19:13 PM to
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