Tek-Tips is the largest IT community on the Internet today!

Members share and learn making Tek-Tips Forums the best source of peer-reviewed technical information on the Internet!

  • Congratulations IamaSherpa on being selected by the Tek-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Database Security

Status
Not open for further replies.

anonymous

Technical User
Feb 13, 2001
6
US
'Remove Access Security' released by Neil Britto destroys all security in Microsoft Access database files, leaving databases vulnerable. Microsoft Access is used globally by millions of users. Some organizations have all their data in Microsoft Access databases, which was considered secure until now.

'Remove Access Security 2.0' is the ultimate tool concerning security for Access databases. 'Remove Access Security' can reveal passwords, reset passwords and remove user-level security for secured and non-secured database (.MDB) files. This software is simple to use, and can be a real lifesaver in a variety of situations, including corrupted passwords, corrupted workgroup files, forgotten passwords etc. This is the first software ever developed which works with encrypted databases as well.

In simpler terms, any user can run the software over a database, thereby gaining total control over the data contained therein. The user can then add, delete and modify data, which means that records can be permanently destroyed or changed without anyone's knowledge.

‘Remove Access Security' is a must-have for all database administrators and power users

For more information :
Website :
 
Thanks for the heads-up, Neil. Are you planning to release an application designed to prevent your other applications from cracking database security? LOL

You don't have to log on as an anonymous visitor... join the crowd. We are all trying to solve common problems and none of us are so guarded with our software that we are afraid to reveal the inner "secrets".

We will be welcome at Tek-Tips as long as we don't spam the members, try to sell our software or try recruit employees.
VCA.gif

 
People usually choose to protect their own computers. Firewalls are easy enough to install. Usually it's the web sites that hackers are trying to get into anyway. Though, not all of them. The personal information you would
share with eBondUSA wouldn't be very valuable. How much money you've recently spend on munis, and which munis you think are good investments is not going to interest the average hacker the way your bank account will. What you need to keep safe are you credit card numbers, your SSN, your passwords, things that can unlock the door to acount information that can be used against you.
Jen
 
please excuse my post is in the wrong thread--
maybe I would have been one of those confused
Floridians?
Jen
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor

Back
Top