What one? I will put it.
]]>Hi anky2930;
Link to what?
link to the topic or suggestions related to maths.
]]>Link to what?
]]>Hi TheMathJudge, ARBGenius, MathGenius, Mathgenius1,2,3, ARB, Anthony Babbage, MG1,2,3, Transcendental, GeniusIsBack ...
It is a shame that you did not stop to learn anything from Ricky. Now you are barred for the 14 th time.
I remember post#29, I was just a new member back then. I remember being disgusted by your choice of username. You had already been barred 7 or 8 times for perverse behaviour. It is almost 3 years ago and you are still the same.
I will let you in on a little secret, I am honored that you put me in the same spot as Ricky.
I want yo ask you something that what is the exact meaning of an established member because I am not able to post the link.
]]>It is a shame that you did not stop to learn anything from Ricky. Now you are barred for the 14 th time.
I remember post#29, I was just a new member back then. I remember being disgusted by your choice of username. You had already been barred 7 or 8 times for perverse behaviour. It is almost 3 years ago and you are still the same.
I will let you in on a little secret, I am honored that you put me in the same class as Ricky.
]]>Now a days hackers have gone to such limits to even infect the 'X"(close) button of your browsers, so i recommend either pressing Alt + F4 or opening up Task Manager and clicking End Task. (the latter will close the whole browser.)
I don't believe this is correct. "Infecting" the close button would amount to malicious code being able to infiltrate and modify the browser code. If this is possible, then the malware would already have full access to your system. As such, there would be no reason to infect such a thing.
I'm a little late to the party here, but hackers can create a window without the standard close, minimize/maximize, move to bar buttons. Instead, they put in custom ones that download things onto your computer. I've heard of people that had their computer infected after they rolled over an ad on the way to the X button. I would agree to press Alt+F4 to close a window. But if your computer is bogged down, don't get impatient and start going Alt-F4Alt-F4Alt-F4Alt-F4Alt-F4... It will only shut down your computer. Obviously not a good idea.
]]>To avoid accidentally infecting your computer, some security experts recommend that you click on the "X" in the upper righthand corner of the pop-up window rather than using the buttons within the pop-up. However, some of the more malicious pop-ups may even have disguised a malware download to mimic that "X", and again you might actually be initiating a download rather than closing the pop-up ad.
This is not "infecting" the 'X' button. It is creating a 2nd close button within the window; i.e. running on javascript code rather than native browser code. Any decent browser should tell you that you're downloading something, and you should always have this message box enabled. In the event you accidentally download something you didn't mean to, you will still have to choose to execute it to infect your system.
You will be just as safe as long as you make sure you click the browser 'X', and nothing inside the popup add. I still believe it is overly paranoid to close popups from the task manager.
]]>Here is a few sites i have read this on about pop ups:
http://cnettv.cnet.com/8301-13415_53-9936211-11.html
http://aumha.net/viewtopic.php?f=26&t=32872 <-- i am a member of this site and i do trust them as they have helped me clean my system of malware.
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