Soldato
- Joined
- 27 Dec 2005
- Posts
- 17,316
- Location
- Bristol
Had access to my computing teacher's login for pretty much all 2 years of college. She was an idiot.
I'm pretty sure that any user that executes it locally or remotely will need local admin rights, so this wouldn't work. You'd just get an access denied message.
Had access to my computing teacher's login for pretty much all 2 years of college. She was an idiot.
No, not really.
I've also worked on the other side of the fence and it's genuinely quite amusing to see what people do when they think they're being clever.
That said, I was a little **** at school when it came to computer security and had way more access than I ever should have. But we live and learn and eventually grow up.
We did other fun stuff to him like taking a screen shot of his desktop and making it into a powerpoint presentation - one slide the screenshot and one slide the screenshot up-side-down. Then play the presentation fullscreen on loop. He comes back to his desk, sees what looks like normal desktop, has working mouse pointer, but every click simply flips the desktopEndless fun.
I'm pretty sure that any user that executes it locally or remotely will need local admin rights, so this wouldn't work. You'd just get an access denied message.
Youtube and facebook here I come![]()
Mate in school looked over the Tech guys shoulder when he typed the domain admin password into his PC.
A few days later, using these credentials starts watching pron off his usb stick ... the teacher had some software to watch what students were doing in their classroom and there it was, projected onto a whiteboard, some bloke smashing a fat woman for all to see![]()
Really? Sending a shutdown command requires local admin rights. How did you get them?
No, you need elevated rights to execute that command on a remote machine (and even the local one IIRC). You can't run it on any old machine without specific account privileges.
And shutdown -a would stop it. That's what you had to do when you had the MS Blaster malware.