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161 lines
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161 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 130
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Title: HPR0130: Unhosing a spyware infected system
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0130/hpr0130.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 12:10:31
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---
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Music
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Welcome to Surfside Hacker Public Radio. This is Oak and I'm going to do a really quick
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nap sort of episode of the moment. I've been having some issues with my Ubuntu install
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as you may be aware I started a little on breezy and have upgraded it through all the Ubuntu
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synths. That isn't the problem. The problem is I believe that because I use stuff like
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the MV and the automatic scripts I'm going to host some of the other things. I've kind
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of half got Pulse Audio working. Actually that might not be that at all because I hear
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that only half works on most people's but I've been having some major issues. It's like
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part is here, part isn't there, part something and I started off from Ubuntu and then I installed
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the KD stuff around that for a while and went back to the GNOME stuff and then went to
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XFC, if I flexbox and I SWM and pretty much just went into a synaptic and said search
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for window managers and install all of them. So I think I've just hacked around with
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that way too much and I need to actually just reinstall from scratch and fix it. And yeah
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I know there's kind of the windows way of getting out of it. But to be fair, breezy,
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stapper, 2.0G, 2.0G, 2.0G, it's hard, it's like upgrading Windows 3.1 to Windows Vista.
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It's not surprising, it's having some issues. I mean to upgrading any of them for any
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of them, it has issues. So you're pretty much reinstalled anyway. So I'm not angry at Ubuntu
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for having issues with me because I think it's fair enough for the amount of upgrades
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and the amount of hacking around I've been doing, you know, I would hack this, hack that
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and won't have any issues with my Nvidia drivers as well. Let's use the automatic script
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and stuff like that on the NV wants to do that and then that didn't work. So we upgraded
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this one and then we'll hey let's just download the NV video, drive us and install those
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anyway. So I'm not surprised I'm having issues. You know, don't take this as me slacking
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off Ubuntu. I'm not, it's really great. I'm still going to reinstall it. I'm just saying
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I'm having some issues, but it means I'm in Windows. Yeah. It's like a bunch of things I
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try and do and suddenly realize, you know, I only have one desktop. I used to having
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four desktops. It's just weird stuff. It's just you go in immediately. I've got updates
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because I haven't looked into it for a while. So instantly they're there. I mean, I
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have set it up so it doesn't automatically install them because otherwise the bass would
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be like, you must reboot, you must reboot and anyway. So I'm in Windows. I'm recording
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this through audacity, though. So it's kind of, you know, a little bit better. So onto
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the topic of the day, I'm going to talk a bit a little bit about how to fix a host
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machine. It is going to be very Windows-centric. I mean, basically, if you're anything like
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me, your family is going to ask you for text port. Now, I haven't managed to convert
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any of my family over to Linux. Yeah, I know. I'm sorry. I am working on this. I really
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am. But wife always says, well, your machine doesn't work ever. Yeah, because I hack
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around with it. You know, I used to be a developer. When I get working again, we'll be still
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doing something in development or something similar like that. So I hack around with
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stuff. It's like the guy that's created the kit car. He's always screwing around with
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it. And half the time is not working because he's playing around with it. That's what
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he enjoys playing around with it. Break it. You fix it. You fix it. That's how it works.
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So yeah, I've been having some issues on my Ubuntu machine because I've made it a
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lamp serve where I'm doing a bunch of stuff like this. You know, I'm doing a bunch of
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stuff that 99% of the world won't bother doing. Then again, pretty much everyone here,
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I'm sure it's in the same boat. You play around with stuff. So I'm still trying to convert
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her. I figure when we're going to new machine for her, I might install a Linux on a build
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up in scratch. You see, and then we put a Linux on it. And, well, hey, honey, if you want
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XP, you know, you can have to pay the $400 for it. Or, you know, you can try this Ubuntu
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thing. I'll try Linux PC Linux, or whatever I want to put on for her. And I might work
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with her for a bit. I must try to convert the son over her. He's got a login on my machine.
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So he's how he's loving it. You know, he's just running a bunch of stuff on there. And
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apart from a couple of games that won't run, those things work for him. So he's enjoying
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that. And then I'm hoping, yeah, I'm bringing introducing him to the Gimp. And he's been
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playing around with stuff like that. And he's loving it. And he's seeing his call. And
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you know, anyway, so assuming you have family and they're running Windows and they've got
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their machines host. They've got some spyware, hardware, badware of some description or
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other of some other of them. And they come to you and say, it's screwed. Fix it. You say,
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you want to reinstall it. It's hanged. We can't trust it anymore. When we install Linux,
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might we reinstall something? And they say, no, don't want to install Linux, but why not?
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Because it doesn't do what I want it to do. Well, yeah, you can get around that. I don't
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know what to do. Well, they'll come up some flimsy excuses. They don't want to use Linux
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because they don't know how to do it. Well, did they know how to use Windows the first
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time they did it? I mean, let's face it. I want to turn my machine off. I don't think
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I'm going to click on a button mark. Start. I want to log off. Start. Shut down. Log off.
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I mean, that makes no sense. You want to log off. So you want to stop using the computer
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and see, click on start. All right, fine. That's how they do it. Then you click on shut
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down. Although you don't actually want to shut down the damn computer. I mean, does this
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make any sense? It makes no sense to start shut down. Log off. Go figure. Anyway, so whatever
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reason they don't want to use it, they won't let you install Linux over the top. Then you
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say, OK, well, let's reinstall in this. And they say, well, the disk didn't come with
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the machine or I didn't run backups or whatever the reason. So you're stuck with trying
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to unhose this system. You're not going to do it basically because we can't trust it.
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There's been nasty stuff on it. We can't ever trust it ever again unless you reinstall.
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And literally, you know, I would like to deband the disk and start again, kind of let's
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make damnser. Nothing else is remaining. But so, you know, you're going to have to try
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and fix it. So you download some programs. And I'm just going to go quickly through some
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of these programs and quickly sort of what you need to do and what I would run to fix
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it all up and kind of try and get it back into a semi-working way. So you download and
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run AdWare, spybot search, destroy. They're pretty cool for removing stuff. They're not
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going to remove everything. They're going to remove most of it, but hopefully enough to
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get it working again. In your Nantivirus, I would suggest either AVG or Clam AV, one of
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the two of those is going to work. AVG's proprietary, but it does have free version. Clam AV,
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you probably have heard of because it's the open source of antivirus. I'd also recommend
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hijack this because it shows the list of connections, what's coming out, what's listening
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on, where. That can be pretty cool. If you've got something nasty, you can say, oh, look,
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something on it's listening on port 5050 or whatever it is. You know, if you've got
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IRC connections opening somewhere, you know, I'm not on IRC, oh, that might be going off
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to the botnetton. So that can be cool. Rookit, Revealer and Auto Runs, while I've mentioned
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these before in the citizen tunnel, EPS, but hopefully they show what's running and what
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Rookit's there. You can remove stuff off there. That's pretty cool. So I'll go ahead and
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and download those off a different machine because we can't trust the one that's got the spyware
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on it, but you know, so we download it on another machine, bonons with CD or whatever,
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take it over and you run the Adawayer and spybot and you update them, make sure they
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got the latest versions, run them and pretty much run, yes, everything. Now, when you're done
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with spybot, what you can also do, he says trying to click on it up and find where spybot is,
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there's Adawayer, where spybot is, spybot so to destroy. What you can do with spybot,
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is when you run it, you've got a couple of options under the sort of advanced tab or tools
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I forget where it is. It wants me to do stuff, immunize, assist, I think they call it,
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in click on immunize and it comes up with unprotected, protected and total and it can
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not quite sure what it, I think it blocks nasty pages and sort of cookies and stuff. I mean,
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generally you just say immunize and it goes and does this weird brick wall animation stuff and says,
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it's blocking cookies and stuff and it does stuff. If you go into the advanced mode, the
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advanced mode of spybot is to destroy if it's more options to default mode or the,
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but may also include those that will do harm to your system, whatever you see, hit yes,
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and you've got other things and you can go through tools, I think it is, and then
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residents and then you can turn SD helper and t-timer on and I recommend using both those.
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They take a little bit of memory but the t-timer for example, the t-timer is pretty cool because
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what it does is when a program tries to make itself start on boot up by putting yourself
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in the registry or the startup folder or any of these things, t-timer actually pops
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in and says, hang on, someone wants to do this, do you want to allow it? Get it involved teaching
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the people not to just randomly, yes, on everything but it can help out a lot. It blocks browser
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help objects and a bunch of things and it's pretty cool. The SD helper does blocks internet explorer
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stuff which can be pretty cool. Under the i.e. tweaks we can do something that isn't actually
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an i.e. only thing but we can lock the host file as readown is protection against hi-checkers.
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I recommend you check that but then you can do that that can help out things as well.
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You also have a bunch of other things like you can look at the system startup and look at all the
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weird problems and that. Yeah, you can do stuff like that. I recommend you do it through other
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things though personally but that's just me. You also have a secure shredder that you can do things
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but there we go, you know, we can do that and set those tools up. So I do recommend you do that
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but then you run, otherwise by what? Do everything they say. You install Clam, AV, you run that and
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basically just do what it says. I mean depending on how much you know you may want to actually look
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and think about it but generally just do what it tells you. Hi-check this, I said you run that,
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you look at the connections and see if there's anything, all if there's anything, all you can go
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and look at it. If you're that worried, rename the executable. One of these weird things, you
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won't be able to delete it because it's using it but you can rename it and then when you reboot
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you shouldn't be able to find itself and when you run. If you actually rename an executable
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something else like .back because it's not next to you, it shouldn't be running and kind of
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it stops it running. So you can do that, it does require a reboot of course.
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Rooker Revealing auto runs, avoid going through so yeah run those, do stuff. Once you've done that
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and hopefully we have a pretty well cleared up system, there's a bunch of other things
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we can then do just generally tidy up the computer and make sure it's running okay.
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You can run the download phone called C Cleaner which is crap cleaner and it tights up the crap
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left on the computer, it removes temporary files and stuff like that. Download that, run it, do
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what it says. Now that hopefully we've removed everything nasty and we've got a much better running
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system, then you can do something like Disclean which is part of the Windows stuff. Run it anyway,
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it probably won't do anything because we just run C Cleaner but hey why not, then run
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scandus to make sure that this looks okay, then once you've done that de-frag, also part of
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all those part of Windows, you might as well run all those and then that should hopefully be it.
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I mean I'm skipping a bunch of things here, there are other things you want to run, if you know
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you want to make sure they've got, make sure they've got a firewall and a bunch of things like that,
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but this is generally stuff that fixes most of the stuff for them. I run a bunch of more stuff
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for my Windows machine because I'm just like that, I've got a lot of things, he says randomly
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clicking through, but that hopefully should be enough. I mean I said remind them you cannot
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guarantee it if things have been removed because the only way to do that is to reinstall it from
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scratch. Anyway, that's about it, I'm going to stop writing now. I hope you enjoyed this
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rather impromptu episode of Hacker Public Radio. Hopefully over the next week I'm going to try
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and reinstall a bunch of onto my machine after I've backed up, which doesn't help that my DVD
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drives packed up and I'm too broke to actually buy a new one and yeah it's a long story of
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whiny, whiny, don't want to bore you with my details. But hopefully we'll get this all sorted out
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soon and I'll be back to using our door and actually having things run properly and fantastically
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and sound better and everything and so on and so forth. But until then, this has been Soak
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and you've been listening to Hacker Public Radio. Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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HPR is sponsored by Carol.net so head on over to C-A-R-O dot-E-T for all of those games.
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