Keven was baned

15 views
Skip to first unread message

Bryan O'Neal

unread,
May 19, 2011, 11:29:37 AM5/19/11
to WA...@googlegroups.com
We have a noise to signal ratio to keep. And with as little signal as
we have we can not afford his noise. I warned him twice and then
banned our most recent spammer. He was a member of hundreds of google
groups and doing the same thing on each. In retrospect I should have
looked into his profile and baned him sooner.

Would any one else like to help moderate this group?

JD Austin

unread,
May 19, 2011, 11:57:53 AM5/19/11
to wa...@googlegroups.com

Thanks ;)
I think its ok to have those kinds of people on the list IF they aren't just there to spam away.
He could have sent a single email with a brief list of openings and a link to get more info instead of bombarding us with jobs most people wouldn't want.  I don't think a single job that he posted was in az.
Now on topic....
Recently I did a reinstall of XP pro to resolve a corrupt registry issue left over from removing malware and rogue antivirus.  I tried several registry cleaners, combofix, malwarebytes, dialafix, reinstalled windows updates and a few other things first but I couldn't fix windows updates.  Are there any tools out there that can really fix a jacked up windows registry?

Zachary Giles

unread,
May 19, 2011, 11:59:42 AM5/19/11
to wa...@googlegroups.com
I had already sent him to the trash directly.
--
Zach Giles
zgi...@gmail.com

Bryan O'Neal

unread,
May 19, 2011, 12:39:44 PM5/19/11
to wa...@googlegroups.com
At this point I would be looking at updating the registry directly.
Windows update is fairly well documented. And most hijack ware just
point the update client to there servers so find the key and look at a
a clean machine for the correct key.

If you need further assistance post details and I will look at it tonight.

Also I agree with your assessment of kevin.

--
Sent from my mobile device

Stephen

unread,
May 19, 2011, 1:03:34 PM5/19/11
to wa...@googlegroups.com
I don't mind assisting. we are low enough bandwidth it shouldn't be a
huge problem.

On Thu, May 19, 2011 at 8:57 AM, JD Austin <j...@twingeckos.com> wrote:

--
A mouse trap, placed on top of your alarm clock, will prevent you from
rolling over and going back to sleep after you hit the snooze button.

Stephen

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages