shish_mish to [email protected]English • 2 years agoMicrosoft Defender Flags Tor Browser as a Trojan and Removes it from the System - Deformdeform.coexternal-linkmessage-square140fedilinkarrow-up11.21Kcross-posted to: [email protected][email protected]
arrow-up11.21Kexternal-linkMicrosoft Defender Flags Tor Browser as a Trojan and Removes it from the System - Deformdeform.coshish_mish to [email protected]English • 2 years agomessage-square140fedilinkcross-posted to: [email protected][email protected]
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish65•2 years agoNo. Heruistics/“fortune tells” are 100% what is required for good security. Because if all you are doing is flagging known threats? Then that means you are perpetually vulnerable and exploited. False positives are a thing. In fact, flagging a device that intercepts and routes all traffic to weird random ass servers is a very good thing. The answer is to note the false positive and then release an updated list that permitlists it.
minus-squarePossibly linuxlinkfedilinkEnglish1•2 years agoI was joking sorry I didn’t mark it as such
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish1•2 years agothank you Puzzle_Sluts_4Ever, very clear explanation
No. Heruistics/“fortune tells” are 100% what is required for good security.
Because if all you are doing is flagging known threats? Then that means you are perpetually vulnerable and exploited.
False positives are a thing. In fact, flagging a device that intercepts and routes all traffic to weird random ass servers is a very good thing.
The answer is to note the false positive and then release an updated list that permitlists it.
I was joking sorry I didn’t mark it as such
you’ll first need to make a joke
BANANA
thank you Puzzle_Sluts_4Ever, very clear explanation