so today i went to login on my mac notebook and my password didn't work. immediately i suspected pavement had changed my password but he denied it and he definitely wouldn't have known it anyways. so i get on to another computer and google that shit, and i found this:
http://support.apple.com/kb/TS1543?viewlocale=en_US
a webpage, on apple's goddamn website, on how to change your password. or, more importantly - how to hack into any mac with the current 10.5 OS, if you have physical access to it. the process involves rebooting and pressing command+S to get to basically what is a unix terminal. type about 4 lines of commands, and then "passwd [username]", and you can set a new password for any account on the machine, without having to know any passwords. there was no "type old password", just setting a new one.
the webpage refers to this being used "after an upgrade", but i haven't upgraded my shit in awhile. just to be sure i tried it on another macbook and a desktop, all with success.
i mean maybe i'm out of the h4xx0r loop, and i've never had to try to hack into an account on windows... but this seems kinda ridiculous and unsecure. wtf? is this something that is normal across OS's as a last-resort backdoor?
http://support.apple.com/kb/TS1543?viewlocale=en_US
a webpage, on apple's goddamn website, on how to change your password. or, more importantly - how to hack into any mac with the current 10.5 OS, if you have physical access to it. the process involves rebooting and pressing command+S to get to basically what is a unix terminal. type about 4 lines of commands, and then "passwd [username]", and you can set a new password for any account on the machine, without having to know any passwords. there was no "type old password", just setting a new one.
the webpage refers to this being used "after an upgrade", but i haven't upgraded my shit in awhile. just to be sure i tried it on another macbook and a desktop, all with success.
i mean maybe i'm out of the h4xx0r loop, and i've never had to try to hack into an account on windows... but this seems kinda ridiculous and unsecure. wtf? is this something that is normal across OS's as a last-resort backdoor?
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