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Comodo Firewall Bypassing a Bypass
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<blockquote data-quote="ebocious" data-source="post: 1109948" data-attributes="member: 75834"><p>In order for Microsoft to “give access,” this implies a backdoor of some sort. Care to elaborate? To my knowledge, Microsoft will share data on its servers (e.g. Outlook, OneDrive, Azure) in response to a subpoena. But they don’t deliberately plant vulnerabilities in their software that allow for surreptitious remote access to customers’ devices.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Maybe I’m misunderstanding you. Are you talking about authoritarian policies with regard to punishing criminals? I thought you meant punishing victims of remote exploits. If it’s the former, I might be inclined to agree.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ebocious, post: 1109948, member: 75834"] In order for Microsoft to “give access,” this implies a backdoor of some sort. Care to elaborate? To my knowledge, Microsoft will share data on its servers (e.g. Outlook, OneDrive, Azure) in response to a subpoena. But they don’t deliberately plant vulnerabilities in their software that allow for surreptitious remote access to customers’ devices. Maybe I’m misunderstanding you. Are you talking about authoritarian policies with regard to punishing criminals? I thought you meant punishing victims of remote exploits. If it’s the former, I might be inclined to agree. [/QUOTE]
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