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Weird Windows Woes: Fix Random Freezes, Test Mode

PC World - Of all the hassles that can plague a PC user (and, trust me, there are many), few are as infuriating as random lockups. There you are, typing along, when suddenly everything just freezes. No error message, no blue screen, just a locked-up, unresponsive system. I’ve been there. I feel your pain.

If you’re a Windows 7 (or Windows Server 2008 R2) user, you may be in luck: Microsoft recently issued a hotfix for systems that stop responding randomly.

What causes the problem? Microsoft says it’s “a deadlock condition between the Lsass.exe process, the Redirected Drive Buffering Subsystem (Rdbss.sys) driver, and the Winsock kernel.” Well, duh! That was going to be my first guess.

The hotfix is available for both 32- and 64-bit versions of Windows 7. (Fun fact: you’ll often see these versions represented as “x86″ and “x64,” respectively.) To get it, go to the appropriate Microsoft Support page, click “View and request hotfix downloads,” accept Microsoft’s terms, choose the hotfix compatible with your system, and provide your e-mail address. Click “Request hotfix,” then check your e-mail inbox for a message containing a link to the download.

I’m not sure why Microsoft makes you jump through these hoops, but, then again, I’m not sure why Microsoft does half the things it does.

Remove the ‘Test Mode’ Watermark from Windows 7

Isn’t it cute the way Windows always finds new ways to surprise and annoy you? Like today, for instance, I booted my system and noticed something new in the lower right corner:

Test Mode Windows 7 Build 7600

I’ve been using this licensed and activated version of Windows 7 for nearly a year. What’s with the bizarro watermark all of a sudden?

Who knows? I’ve also been trying to troubleshoot a weird, out-of-the-blue “security warning” message that appears whenever I click a Start Menu program. As I regularly tell my dad when crazy stuff like this happens: “That’s Windows for you.”

Don’t get me wrong–I like Windows 7 a lot. I’m just a little fed up with this kind of thing. And I recently gave up coffee, so I’m a little cranky. Anyway, if you’ve encountered that same watermark in Windows 7, here’s how to get rid of it:

Click Start and type cmd. Right-click cmd and choose Run as Administrator. At the command prompt that appears, type bcdedit.exe -set loadoptions ENABLE_INTEGRITY_CHECKS Press Enter, then type bcdedit.exe -set TESTSIGNING OFF Press Enter, then type exit and press Enter one last time. Reboot your PC. That should send the watermark packing; it did on my system.

Oh, Windows–what exciting surprises do you have in store for me tomorrow?

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Weird Windows Woes: Fix Random Freezes, Test Mode

ACLU Sues Over Warrantless Laptop Border Searches

An Obama administration policy allowing U.S. border officials to seize and search laptops, smart phones and other electronic devices for any reason was challenged as unconstitutional in federal court Tuesday.

Citing the government’s own figures, the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers claim about 6,500 persons had their electronic devices searched along the U.S. border since October, 2008. In one instance, according to the lawsuit filed in New York, a computer laptop was seized from a New York man at the Canadian border and not returned for 11 days. The lawsuit seeks no monetary damages, but asks the court to order an end to the searches.

“All we want is that the government has to have some shred of evidence they can point to that may turn up some evidence of wrongdoing,” says ACLU attorney Catherine Crump.

The so-called “border exception” to the Fourth Amendment’s probable-cause standard sometimes requires the lower standard of “reasonable suspicion” to search a traveler’s person or physical property, says Crump. But when it comes to electronic devices, the government’s “policy allows a purely suspicionless search of laptops, cell phones and other electronic devices,” she says.

The lawsuit comes as laptops, and now smart phones, (.pdf) have become virtual extensions of ourselves, housing everything from e-mail to instant-message chats to our papers and effects.

The government maintains it needs the carte blanche authority to search electronics at the border to keep the United States safe. That’s what it told the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which approved the searches in 2008. Tuesday’s lawsuit is in the jurisdiction of the New York-based 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which is not obliged to follow precedent in other circuits.

The Bush administration first announced the suspicionless laptop search rules in 2008. The Obama administration followed up with virtually the same rules last year.

The government, Crump said, “should at least have some reasonable suspicion” when it comes to searches and seizures of electronic devices at the border.

The case was brought on behalf of 26-year-old Pascal Abidor, whose laptop was seized for 11 days in May as he was traveling by rail from Canada to his parents’ New York residence. He is an Islamic studies graduate student in Canada.

At an Amtrak inspection point, he showed his U.S. passport to an agent. He was ordered to move to the café car, where they removed his laptop from his luggage and “ordered Mr. Abidor to enter his password,” according to the lawsuit.

Agents asked him about pictures they found on his laptop, which included Hamas and Hezbollah rallies. He explained to the agent that he was earning a doctoral degree in the modern history of Shiites in Lebanon. He was handcuffed and then jailed for three hours while the authorities looked through his computer, according to the suit. Numerous agents questioned him, the suit said.

They released him and kept his laptop for 11 days, before his lawyer complained.

Plaintiffs in the suit also include the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and the National Press Photographer’s Association. The lawyers group maintains search policy exposes privileged communications. The photographer’s association said the policy interferes “with their ability to do their work.”

Photo: bsolah/Flickr

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ACLU Sues Over Warrantless Laptop Border Searches

Spammers exploit second Facebook bug in a week

Computerworld - Facebook today said it has fixed the bug that allowed a spamming worm to automatically post messages to users’ walls earlier this week.

The flaw was the second in the past week that let spammers flood the service with messages promoting scams.

Last week, Facebook quashed a different bug in its photo upload service that let a spammer post thousands of unwanted wall messages.

The newest worm was noticed Monday by researchers at a pair of antivirus vendors, Finland-based F-Secure and U.K.-based Sophos.

“A clever spammer has discovered a Facebook vulnerability that allows for auto-replicating links,” said Sean Sullivan, an F-secure security researcher. “Until now, typical Facebook spam has required the use of some social engineering to spread.”

Clicking on the link to the bogus application automatically added the app to users’ profiles, then automatically reposted a status message with a new link to friends’ walls, said Sophos’ Graham Cluley today.

While last week’s spam plugged free iPhones, this week’s scam touted surveys that offered Best Buy and Walmart gift cards to consumers who completed a marketing poll.

“I thought this survey stuff was GARBAGE but I just went on a shopping spree at walmart thanks to FB,” some of the spam messages read.

Facebook today said it had plugged the newest hole and cleaned up users’ walls.

“Earlier this week, we discovered a bug that made it possible for an application to bypass our normal CSRF [cross-site request forgery] protections through a complicated series of steps,” said a company spokesman in an e-mailed statement. “We … fixed it within hours of discovering it [but] for a short period of time before it was fixed, several applications that violated our policies were able to post content to people’s profiles if those people first clicked on a link to the application.”

“This is different than the photo upload bug,” said Sullivan. “But be glad it’s spammers doing this and not bot generators.”

If malware makers had had this bug or last week’s photo upload flaw, they might have been able to use them to attack Facebook’s more than 500 million users with malformed images or auto-generated links to sites hosting a wide range of browser, operating system or application exploits, said Sullivan.

While Sullivan said a recent four-month analysis he’s done on Facebook spam showed that the company has done a better job at curbing what he called “feature abuse” — bogus accounts sending massive numbers of friend requests, for instance — it’s had a tougher job quashing bugs before scammers have used them.

“Clearly, there are bugs in Facebook and its application platform,” said Sullivan. “There will be more to come. I certainly don’t envy [Facebook].”

The two scammer-leveraged bugs came on the heels of a more traditional spam campaign two weeks ago that enticed Facebook and Twitter users with bogus claims of a free iPad.

Both Facebook and Sullivan gave users the same advice about dealing with spam, bug-related or not.

“We’re advising people to be wary of posts and messages with suspicious-looking links, even if they come from friends, and to report applications that might violate our policies,” said the Facebook spokesman.

“This should be a wake-up call for people who are clicking on links,” added Sullivan. “They should be thinking, ‘Maybe I don’t even need to look at this [link].’ It’s better to be safe than sorry.”

Gregg Keizer covers Microsoft, security issues, Apple, Web browsers and general technology breaking news for Computerworld. Follow Gregg on Twitter at Twitter @gkeizer or subscribe to Gregg’s RSS feed Keizer RSS. His e-mail address is gkeizer@ix.netcom.com.


Read more about Security in Computerworld’s Security Topic Center.

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Spammers exploit second Facebook bug in a week

SB10-249: Vulnerability Summary for the Week of August 30, 2010

The US-CERT Cyber Security Bulletin provides a summary of new vulnerabilities that have been recorded by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) National Vulnerability Database (NVD) in the past week. The NVD is sponsored by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) National Cyber Security Division (NCSD) / United States Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT). For modified or updated entries, please visit the NVD, which contains historical vulnerability information.

The vulnerabilities are based on the CVE vulnerability naming standard and are organized according to severity, determined by the Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) standard. The division of high, medium, and low severities correspond to the following scores:

  • High – Vulnerabilities will be labeled High severity if they have a CVSS base score of 7.0 – 10.0

  • Medium – Vulnerabilities will be labeled Medium severity if they have a CVSS base score of 4.0 – 6.9

  • Low – Vulnerabilities will be labeled Low severity if they have a CVSS base score of 0.0 – 3.9

Entries may include additional information provided by organizations and efforts sponsored by US-CERT. This information may include identifying information, values, definitions, and related links. Patch information is provided when available. Please note that some of the information in the bulletins is compiled from external, open source reports and is not a direct result of US-CERT analysis.

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SB10-249: Vulnerability Summary for the Week of August 30, 2010

Apple leaks Wednesday release for iOS 4.1

Computerworld - Apple has revealed that the iOS 4.1 update will be launched tomorrow.

For a brief time over the weekend, the company’s U.K. site stated that the update, which CEO Steve Jobs said would be released this week, would be available Wednesday, Sept. 8.

The site was quickly revised to show a notice saying only that the download was “Coming soon,” the same message that has been posted on Apple’s U.S. site since Jobs introduced the operating system upgrade and touted its new features last week.

Along with new functionality included with iOS 4.1 — ranging from “high dynamic range” (HDR) photography that produces more detail in over- and under-exposed areas, to the launch of Apple’s Game Center multi-player online network — Jobs also promised that the update would fix some of the bugs in iOS 4.0 that users have been complaining about since that version’s June 21 debut.

Owners of older iPhones, especially 2008′s iPhone 3G, are hoping that iOS 4.1 solves the slow-down problems many have experienced since they upgraded this summer.

Jobs listed “iPhone 3G performance bugs” last week when he ticked off the fixes to expect in iOS 4.1.

According to Lifehacker.com, which got its hands on an unauthorized version of iOS 4.1, the update outperformed iOS 4.0 in informal tests, although the speed improvements were sometimes minor.

Unlike rival OS developers, such as Microsoft, Apple doesn’t issue updates on a specific day of the week. Apple released iOS 4.0 on a Monday, iOS 3.1 on a Wednesday, iOS 3.0 on a Wednesday, and iOS 2.2 on a Friday.

Leaked developer builds of iOS 4.1 weigh in between 308MB and 590MB, but it’s unknown how large the production versions of the upgrade will be tomorrow.

Apple releases its mobile operating system updates via iTunes. Users will have to download iOS 4.1 to their Windows PC or Mac using iTunes, then sync their iPod Touches or iPhones to the machine.

Gregg Keizer covers Microsoft, security issues, Apple, Web browsers and general technology breaking news for Computerworld. Follow Gregg on Twitter at Twitter @gkeizer or subscribe to Gregg’s RSS feed Keizer RSS. His e-mail address is gkeizer@ix.netcom.com.


Read more about Mobile OSes in Computerworld’s Mobile OSes Topic Center.

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Apple leaks Wednesday release for iOS 4.1