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Why are we even messing with anything other than WD these days?
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<blockquote data-quote="danb" data-source="post: 888662" data-attributes="member: 62850"><p>I am not here to argue, people can read and decide for themselves.</p><p></p><p>BTW, I thought you were joking about not being about the create a .vba file a couple of weeks ago. If you need an MS Office license for testing, please let me know, I might have an extra one you can have.</p><p></p><p>From the article you posted “While consumer ransomware targets Windows and Adobe vulnerabilities, enterprise ransomware targets high-value assets like servers, application infrastructure, and collaboration tools since they contain an organization’s critical business data,”</p><p></p><p>I would have to read the article to be sure, but I believe they are discussing exploits and vulnerabilities <u>specifically</u>. From what I have read, most attacks are simple attachments (91% if memory serves). If true, these are two very different things.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="danb, post: 888662, member: 62850"] I am not here to argue, people can read and decide for themselves. BTW, I thought you were joking about not being about the create a .vba file a couple of weeks ago. If you need an MS Office license for testing, please let me know, I might have an extra one you can have. From the article you posted “While consumer ransomware targets Windows and Adobe vulnerabilities, enterprise ransomware targets high-value assets like servers, application infrastructure, and collaboration tools since they contain an organization’s critical business data,” I would have to read the article to be sure, but I believe they are discussing exploits and vulnerabilities [U]specifically[/U]. From what I have read, most attacks are simple attachments (91% if memory serves). If true, these are two very different things. [/QUOTE]
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