Free Keylogger King

T

Tramp

Modern programs do their best to protect you from data loss. Text
editors create backup copies of documents, web browsers remember login
info that you enter on Web pages. Password managers help you manage your
passwords, backup managers help you backup virtually everything. Yet,
how is it that you still spend hours or even days restoring pieces of
precious information? How is it that you lose your info again and again?

Is there a solution? I was happily surprised to find a freeware program
that does exactly what I need. This program is called Free Keylogger
King. Despite its funny name, the program has nothing to do with spying.
It simply logs all applications that you start on your own PC, the
titles of their windows, all your keystrokes, and more.

How can it help you? Imagine you are writing a long e-mail message. Then
you click a wrong button or your e-mail client hangs and you have to
write the same text from scratch. Sound familiar? With Free Keylogger
King you will never lose any of your text, whether it was typed in an e-
mail client, a text editor, a text field of an on-line form or anywhere
else. Simply open King's log. You will find all your text right there.

Sometimes I need to copy several fragments of text from a web page or a
Word document. Windows clipboard only allows you to copy one piece of
text at a time. I use Free Keylogger King to grab as many pieces of text
at a time as I need to. I just copy them all into the Windows clipboard
and end up with the whole thing in my King log.

What was the address of that page? Why haven't you added it to your
bookmarks? I was guessing addresses as you do. But now I know that my
Free Keylogger King saves them all for me. Yes, it also logs the
addresses of all the Web pages that you visit.

Did I mention passwords? All my passwords and registration keys are also
safely logged now!
http://www.keyloggerking.com/free-keylogger.html
 
A

arehrlich

WARNING!!

AVAST alerted me of a trojan being installed during installation. If
anyone has additional information, please post it here.

Alan
 
I

In_Parenthesis

WARNING!!

AVAST alerted me of a trojan being installed during installation. If
anyone has additional information, please post it here.

Alan

Alan,

Isn't that to be expected? IMO that is "in the nature of the beast",
keyloggers aren't on many anti-malware program's definition list just to
make a long list...

Jay
(IP)
 
A

arehrlich

Jay,

Thanks for the response. I am always concerned when the Virus/Trojan
alert goes off but if it should - due to the nature of the beast - I'd
think that the developer would provide ample notice.

I think that the concept of the program is outstanding. I can't say
how many times I could have used it. Yet I would not continue the
install after the warning flag.

Upon uninstall a quick questionnaire popped up. I mentioned the alert
but I have not heard back from the company.

Alan
 
L

Lizard

does anyone know of a file renamer that will remane all the files in a
directory from a text list?

i know this is an unusual request. just hoping because i did something
stupid.

windows xp

tia

lizard
 
A

Art

Jay,

Thanks for the response. I am always concerned when the Virus/Trojan
alert goes off but if it should - due to the nature of the beast - I'd
think that the developer would provide ample notice.

I think that the concept of the program is outstanding. I can't say
how many times I could have used it. Yet I would not continue the
install after the warning flag.

Upon uninstall a quick questionnaire popped up. I mentioned the alert
but I have not heard back from the company.

Out of curiosity, I downloaded Keylogger King and scanned the install
file using Kaspersky. It reports "not a virus Monitor.Win32.KGBSpy.34"
in one of the files. What "not a virus" means is that there's nothing
to be concerned about. Kaspersky and other av products alert on
"controversialware" such as keyloggers and port scanners which have
both "good" and "bad" purposes. While I can't say with absolute
certainty that there isn't anything wrong with this particular
keylogger that KAV might have missed, I'd bet money that the program
is perfectly harmless ... except to those who don't know their
keystrokes are being logged, of course :)

Art
http://home.epix.net/~artnpeg
 
A

Art

does anyone know of a file renamer that will remane all the files in a
directory from a text list?

i know this is an unusual request. just hoping because i did something
stupid.

windows xp

Well, if you've done the work of preparing a text list as:

oldname1 newname1
oldname2 newname2

and so on simply add the word rename on each line

rename oldname1 newname1
rename oldname2 newname2

and name the file anything with a .bat file extension like foo.bat
and then just run foo.bat

Art
http://home.epix.net/~artnpeg
 
L

Lizard

thanks art, i'll give that a try with some sample files, i haven't done
batch renaming this way before.

lizard
 
T

Thorsten Duhn

Hello,
does anyone know of a file renamer that will remane all the
files in a directory from a text list?

i know this is an unusual request. just hoping because i
did something stupid.

I use Oscar's Renamer for, which is more a text editor for
file lists, in which you also can copy and paste from other
text files/editors.

http://www.mediachance.com/free/renamer.htm

Regards,
Thorsten
 
S

Sue J Thomas

I tried to install this and my virus program (anti-vir) claimed it had
the virus DR/KGBSPY.32.

Too bad. Sounds like a good program.
Keep us posted,
Sue
 
S

Sue J Thomas

I tried to install this and my virus program (anti-vir) claimed it had
the virus DR/KGBSPY.32.

Too bad. Sounds like a good program.
Keep us posted,
Sue







arehrlich said:
Jay,

Thanks for the response. I am always concerned when the Virus/Trojan
alert goes off but if it should - due to the nature of the beast - I'd
think that the developer would provide ample notice.

I think that the concept of the program is outstanding. I can't say
how many times I could have used it. Yet I would not continue the
install after the warning flag.

Upon uninstall a quick questionnaire popped up. I mentioned the alert
but I have not heard back from the company.

Alan



--
 
I

In_Parenthesis

Jay,

Thanks for the response. I am always concerned when the Virus/Trojan
alert goes off but if it should - due to the nature of the beast - I'd
think that the developer would provide ample notice.

I think that the concept of the program is outstanding. I can't say
how many times I could have used it. Yet I would not continue the
install after the warning flag.

Upon uninstall a quick questionnaire popped up. I mentioned the alert
but I have not heard back from the company.

Alan

Alan,

YW! Be careful with programs like this, I don't like this spying software
for a single bit!

I think you won't hear from them; if they are honest they are in a lousy
position: They wrote the program flagged as a trojan; now... would you
believe the writer of a virus when he would say that his program is
harmless? I, for one, wouldn't!

Jay
(IP)
 
A

Art

I tried to install this and my virus program (anti-vir) claimed it had
the virus DR/KGBSPY.32.

Keyloggers are, by their very nature, spyware. There's no
virus involved. Notice the "SPY" in the name anti-vir used.
Antivirus products now alert on such spyware as keyloggers.
Too bad.
Why?

Sounds like a good program.

Probably is. The antivirus is simply warning users that they are
being keylogged (spied on). But as long as you have a purpose
for using a keylogger, there's no problem. You see?

Art
http://home.epix.net/~artnpeg
 
E

ellis_jay

Tramp wrote:

Free
Keylogger King. Despite its funny name, the program has nothing to do
with spying.

Uh, ok.
http://www.dnsstuff.com/tools/mail.ch?domain=72.51.37.787+

http://www.dnsstuff.com/tools/whois.ch?server=whois.abuse.net&ip=magebytes.com&cache=off

http://www.dnsstuff.com/tools/whois.ch?ip=www.softplatz.com
http://www.dnsstuff.com/tools/ping.ch?ip=www.softplatz.com

Russian?


--

Let the unseen day be. Today is more than enough.

___Sador the carpenter to Turin
Tolkien, The Unfinished Tales

Ellis_Jay
 
E

ellis_jay

Art said:
Keyloggers are, by their very nature, spyware. There's no
virus involved. Notice the "SPY" in the name anti-vir used.
Antivirus products now alert on such spyware as keyloggers.


Probably is. The antivirus is simply warning users that they are
being keylogged (spied on). But as long as you have a purpose
for using a keylogger, there's no problem. You see?

Art
http://home.epix.net/~artnpeg


"KGBSpy can automatically send out the information it collects via email or
FTP."
from here:
http://www.net-security.org/virus_news.php?id=573

It also appears more than one kgbspy program exists and by different
authors.


--

Let the unseen day be. Today is more than enough.

___Sador the carpenter to Turin
Tolkien, The Unfinished Tales

Ellis_Jay
 
L

Lizard

lizard got the screwed up file names done using oscar's, but sent some time
with the .bat method.

i did the list like this and put the bat in the same folder as the test
files. i used the run command box to execute it. and it acted like it
worked but the manes did not change. was i supposed to run it differently?
incidently, the bat file looked like a text file in the list. is that
right? i'd still like some success on this. it seems so simple.

thanks

lizard
 
A

Art

lizard got the screwed up file names done using oscar's, but sent some time
with the .bat method.

i did the list like this and put the bat in the same folder as the test
files. i used the run command box to execute it. and it acted like it
worked but the manes did not change. was i supposed to run it differently?
incidently, the bat file looked like a text file in the list. is that
right? i'd still like some success on this. it seems so simple.

The first line in the batch file should be

@echo off

Yes, of course, the batch fiile is a ASCII text file that you've
simply renamed and given a .BAT file extension.

The batch is so simple it has to work :)

Art
http://home.epix.net/~artnpeg
 

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