Ah, IE. Our target browser is... wait for it... Opera! Cool.
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
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Get the fuck out of town. I have seriously never heard that before. I'm the only person I know in meatspace who uses it, and I've been told to my virtual face more than once that I will not get coded for, so suck it up (thanks, Gawker, love you lots...).
Moments after updating iOS on my iPhone and iPad, I read that many people upgrading are losing WiFi on their devices. No problems for me, though.
And I read the other day that Virgin Mobile accounts are pretty easy to hack. They use the phone number as the user ID and a 6-digit PIN for a password. Problem is, they allow unlimited, rapid guesses of the PIN, so anyone who knows a Virgin phone # can hack the account in about a day with a script.
So far, Virgin is refusing to do anything about it.
I use opera on my dying oomputer. Chrome works better on my netbook.
Get the fuck out of town. I have seriously never heard that before.
Well, I'm developing for devices rather than computers. Opera fares better there.
And I read the other day that Virgin Mobile accounts are pretty easy to hack. They use the phone number as the user ID and a 6-digit PIN for a password. Problem is, they allow unlimited, rapid guesses of the PIN, so anyone who knows a Virgin phone # can hack the account in about a day with a script.
And that gets you what exactly? I'm just wondering why someone would bother.
And that gets you what exactly? I'm just wondering why someone would bother.
Complete access to the person's account. You can view history of calls made and received, view texts, order a new phone that will be charged to the credit card on file....
Can you see pictures? That's the cool hack.
Complete access to the person's account.
Which could probably be leveraged into a complete takeover of all someone's accounts. At least, that's what happened to that tech journalist last month. Someone got into his cellphone account, IIRC, and from there into his Amazon account, and then Gmail, then Apple, and from there it was all over--he lost everything in the cloud and everything on his MacBook and iPad, which they wiped remotely.
And all they really wanted was his Twitter handle.
I forget the exact chain of connections, but Amazon claims they've blocked the loophole the hackers used.
'Suela,
they got his apple id and amazon id and the rest is history.