these attacks are not so exotic, as they are ubiquitous.
You should look at what microsoft did to sneak its way into a win10 install, you should also look at what google does to snarf permissions with a button by another name. the breadcrumbs can start here.…
of course the practice is absurd, but that doesnt make it non existent. a non trivial number of average users run around the web in an administrative account, there is no escalation required when a script is already…
it also works right here for HN's needs
after reading through this thread, i find some very concerning things. The use of the word nontrivial is one thing. Calling something nontrivial does not mean you have expertise, there are a number of analytic tools…
these attacks are not so exotic, as they are ubiquitous.
You should look at what microsoft did to sneak its way into a win10 install, you should also look at what google does to snarf permissions with a button by another name. the breadcrumbs can start here.…
of course the practice is absurd, but that doesnt make it non existent. a non trivial number of average users run around the web in an administrative account, there is no escalation required when a script is already…
it also works right here for HN's needs
after reading through this thread, i find some very concerning things. The use of the word nontrivial is one thing. Calling something nontrivial does not mean you have expertise, there are a number of analytic tools…