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Post by eternity on Sept 10, 2006 1:35:56 GMT
Now now children, back on topic pleas and no more talk of hacking school puters )
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Post by Mastermind[Gonezor!] on Sept 10, 2006 3:00:07 GMT
We're talking about the theoretical plausibility of making sure the content filter does its job, and nothing more. Because, theoretically, I could be an aspiring web designer, and taking several courses in web design. In that situation, SolidSnake Designs would be beneficial to a school environment.
That is the biggest load of bull I've spewed out in quite some time.
I feel better now.
Out of curiosity, is there a reason everything's hosted on the elixant subdomain, instead of on the main domain?
♥ Mastermind
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Post by eternity on Sept 10, 2006 11:18:23 GMT
no reason that I know of, Ollie will have to tell you the answer to that one
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Post by bfg15000 on Sept 10, 2006 14:54:57 GMT
I have an idea (I might be repeating other ppl b/c I didn't read the full article). Why don't you download Firefox to a hidden folder deep inside one of the computers hard drives and use firefox. At my school I tried it and every website that was blocked on IE wasn't blocked on Firefox. That's what I did last year. ![:P](//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/smiley/tongue.png) By the way, what blocker does your school use? Websense? You can use www.proxify.comNotice the https. At school they only blocked http not https. That's odd. If you tell me the block software that they use, I MAY be able to help you with proxy websites and such. Remember that by bypassing the stupid block software, you are taking a risk with the school contract. ![:(](//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/smiley/sad.png) Be careful. If you want more information, pm me. ![8-)](//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/smiley/cool.png)
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Post by Josh on Sept 10, 2006 15:59:48 GMT
I have an idea (I might be repeating other ppl b/c I didn't read the full article). Why don't you download Firefox to a hidden folder deep inside one of the computers hard drives and use firefox. At my school I tried it and every website that was blocked on IE wasn't blocked on Firefox. That's what I did last year. ![:P](//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/smiley/tongue.png) By the way, what blocker does your school use? Websense? You can use www.proxify.comNotice the https. At school they only blocked http not https. That's odd. If you tell me the block software that they use, I MAY be able to help you with proxy websites and such. Remember that by bypassing the stupid block software, you are taking a risk with the school contract. ![:(](//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/smiley/sad.png) Be careful. If you want more information, pm me. ![8-)](//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/smiley/cool.png) If he is using Bess, this won't work. Bess filters the internet itself, not the browser. And installing Firefox anywhere outside of your student folder isn't a possibility generally. I know our computer run a system restore to a certain point every time they are shut down, that way students can't save anything on the computer. And he has already said that installing into his folder isn't a possiblility because they are watching it.
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Post by Dude™ on Sept 23, 2006 1:00:14 GMT
heck, if your shool is anything like ours, the administration password is probably the schools mailing address, not that i know this for shure or anything, but still yet....you could possibly use a flash drive, or maybe i could possibly code a program, that will help you literally KILL this bess program, and get rid of the filter, and then self-destruct, and leave no evidence.... If your interested about the program, and you have a flash drive, and you KNOW where the programs file directory is... I can make it to where exactly when it opens, to delete bess, and then delete itself, leaving no trace to be left behind.... Probably that is.
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Post by Max on Sept 24, 2006 12:28:43 GMT
Eh. I found one of those, once... In the Shared folder. Whoops. My favorite method of screwing over the school's tech people: 1. Pop the side off the case 2. Remove the CMOS battery (little disk, looks like an oversized watch battery) 3. Put the CMOS battery back in (your boot order is now reset, with CDROM on top) 4. Boot to Knoppix 5. Copy the WINDOWS/system32/config/SAM file to a jump drive 6. Take said jump drive home 7. Use SAMInside to break the encryption, and return the password 8. Use that password. But wait. It gets better. If your school has a lot of computers (like mine does)... That password will work on all of them, because odds are that your tech people didn't bother assigning a new password to each computer. www.thebroken.orgRock on! ♥ Mastermind Another thebroken fan. <3
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Post by eternity on Sept 24, 2006 13:52:30 GMT
oookay, enough spam
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