Hinely Computing Solutions

Hinely Computing Solutions Data Transfers
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Laptop Screen and keyboard replacement
Nuclear Tuneup
System Recovery NOT RETAIL!!!

Desktop and laptop Windows based PC diagnosis, repair and consultation. My diagnosis is NOT based on any metric but service..

03/30/2026

Just had a customer call from an hour away, ready to have me reconnect their printer with a 90 dollar house call.

I'm honest, So I told them that I may or may not be able to fix it.

But that a brand new printer, delivered by WalMart, was 69 bucks with a warranty.

A successful business today would have made the house call, taken the money and kept their mouth shut no matter what. Then offer to make a second house call to install a new printer if needed. Costing the customer up to 180 bucks.

I'm really good at fixing computers. But in hindsight? Perhaps too honest to be a successful businessman in todays world.

Being honest at life "and" work is expensive it seems..

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Is that a Mini PCI-E plug on the back of this SSD??
02/17/2026

Is that a Mini PCI-E plug on the back of this SSD??

02/14/2026

Microsoft’s February Patch Tuesday fixes 59 flaws—including six zero-days already under active attack. How bad are they?

02/13/2026

A developer launched an add-in called AgreeTo, an open-source meeting scheduling tool with a Chrome extension. It was a popular tool, but at some point, it was abandoned by its developer, its backend URL on Vercel expired, and an attacker later claimed that same URL.

That requires some explanation. Office add-ins are essentially XML manifests that tell Outlook to load a specific URL in an iframe. Microsoft reviews and signs the manifest once but does not continuously monitor what that URL serves later.

So, when the outlook-one.vercel.app subdomain became free to claim, a cybercriminal jumped at the opportunity to scoop it up and abuse the powerful ReadWriteItem permissions requested and approved in 2022. These permissions meant the add-in could read and modify a user’s email when loaded. The permissions were appropriate for a meeting scheduler, but they served a different purpose for the criminal.

While Google removed the dead Chrome extension in February 2025, the Outlook add-in stayed listed in Microsoft’s Office Store, still pointing to a Vercel URL that no longer belonged to the original developer.

An attacker registered that Vercel subdomain and deployed a simple four-page phishing kit consisting of fake Microsoft login, password collection, Telegram-based data exfiltration, and a redirect to the real login.microsoftonline.com.

What make this work was simple and effective. When users opened the add-in, they saw what looked like a normal Microsoft sign-in inside Outlook. They entered credentials, which were sent via a JavaScript function to the attacker’s Telegram bot along with IP data, then were bounced to the real Microsoft login so nothing seemed suspicious.

The researchers were able to access the attacker’s poorly secured Telegram-based exfiltration channel and recovered more than 4,000 sets of stolen Microsoft account credentials, plus payment and banking data, indicating the campaign was active and part of a larger multi-brand phishing operation.

“The same attacker operates at least 12 distinct phishing kits, each impersonating a different brand – Canadian ISPs, banks, webmail providers. The stolen data included not just email credentials but credit card numbers, CVVs, PINs, and banking security answers used to intercept Interac e-Transfer payments. This is a professional, multi-brand phishing operation. The Outlook add-in was just one of its distribution channels.”

What to do
If you are or ever have used the AgreeTo add-in after May 2023:

Make sure it’s removed. If not, uninstall the add-in.
Change the password for your Microsoft account.
If that password (or close variants) was reused on other services (email, banking, SaaS, social), change those as well and make each one unique.
Review recent sign‑ins and security activity on your Microsoft account, looking for logins from unknown locations or devices, or unusual times.
Review other sensitive information you may have shared via email.
Scan your mailbox for signs of abuse: messages you did not send, auto‑forwarding rules you did not create, or password‑reset emails for other services you did not request.
Watch payment statements closely for at least the next few months, especially small “test” charges and unexpected e‑transfer or card‑not‑present transactions, and dispute anything suspicious immediately.

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02/13/2026

Buyer beware..

Scam alert — a   email posing as Microsoft came from rnicrosoft. That’s fake. But sneaky, very sneaky — the “r” and “n” ...
02/13/2026

Scam alert — a email posing as Microsoft came from rnicrosoft. That’s fake. But sneaky, very sneaky — the “r” and “n” look like an “m.”
A classic case of
Always double-check sender domains before you click. alert — a email posing as Microsoft came from rnicrosoft. That’s fake. But sneaky, very sneaky — the “r” and “n” look like an “m.”
A classic case of
Always double-check sender domains before you click.

When you unplug a power cable to a drive on a cyberpower prebuilt PC and see what gets through.
02/13/2026

When you unplug a power cable to a drive on a cyberpower prebuilt PC and see what gets through.

02/13/2026

Anti scammer tip for the day!!

Never, ever use your provided email from your internet provider unless it is a company that makes actual, physical, products you can hold in your hand.. None of these internet providers seem to understand security.

Google makes the Pixel phones, Chromebook, etc. Microsoft makes the surface tablet and Office 365 and Windows, which most of you read this on. They have to protect their brand on a whole different level.

For instance, AT&T(the biggest), didn't want the hassle of handling email.. So they bought an online advertising company and the most unsecure email service and handed email over to them. That's why every att.net, bellsouth.net, etc.???
Are actually just Yahoo accounts. Do you really think a tenured and profit driven advertising agency is going to block spam or any marketing to protect your free email??? Or keep your data safe from data breaches?? Really???

The point is, use a GMail or Microsoft provided email over a provided one any day.. Orphan the provided one from comcast or wow or whoever. Use it if a website wants an email to send junk email to.. You shouldn't have to submit to endless crap email just to shop for car parts. Because remember, many sell their email address lists out to other ad companies now.

But do your personal email on a secure service. Not one that can delete your account if your son's friend downloads games illegally over your wifi.

Just a thought..

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Address

130 Springside Path
Harvest, AL
35749

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm
Saturday 12pm - 5pm

Telephone

(256) 655-5636

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