I'll have to download that tomorrow. Would love to see my typing habits when writing articles and whatnot, thanks for sharing this
Don't think there's a team, but if you contact Tom (or possibly SuB, one might be made, it does seem very interesting).
EDIT: Actually using it right now, it looks like a fun piece of software![]()
Then we'll try and guess your passwords![]()
It's a interesting concept but I just can't bring myself to engage with a 3rd party piece of software that essentially logs all your activity... seems a touch to suspicious for me. My Tinterweb Senses are tingling.
Short answer: it's safe. People have used it for novelty purposes for over a decade now. Hundreds of thousands, actually.
The app itself doesn't need to be malicious to be a threat. It just sounds like another vulnerability that could be exploited for something which literally provides zero productivity. I think I'll pass on this one![]()
I just can't really see a point to it though. Do people really find their typing habits interesting?
Not to mention legit or not, it's suspicious. No doubt someone out there could easily embed a keylog command surely?
Hmm. I'd like to make sense of this post, but I can't.
Not trying to be an ass, but I don't think you understand how software works internally. Most people don't. The short answer is that there is more vulnerability in every major browser than there is in Whatpulse.
While it claims to only count key strokes and not what keys you've pressed (so its relatively secure) I still don't see the appeal of it.
Each to their own, I guess.
By that same logic, no one should ever use a browser or a cell phone to make a purchase online.
People give out their credit card numbers to companies who say they wont use it for malicious intent.
WhatPulse uses SSL, and simply records the software. It's been around over a decade now and not a single person has reported anything malicious with WhatPulse whatsoever.
You have to be annoyingly paranoid to think WhatPulse is a keylogger.
I know you aren't being an assYou are right, I dont fully understand how the program works and there is no doubt many like me.
I just see no point to knowing my total keystrokes or mouseclicks for each application I use, or my system uptime, how many times i rebooted in a given period blah blah. Each to their own I guess, but this just doesn't seem like info I need to know.
Annoyingly paranoid is a bit harsh though. BArnsley didn't disagree with you at all. It's just are asking someone to download and install a piece of software they have never heard of and have no experience with. And when said person reads up what it is, it states keystroke count. You can't blame the skepticism here really. And while it is completely legit this software will always have a hard time winning over users simply because of what it is.
We have all the hackers and trojan creators to thank for that![]()
By that same logic, no one should ever use a browser or a cell phone to make a purchase online.
People give out their credit card numbers to companies who say they wont use it for malicious intent.
WhatPulse uses SSL, and simply records the software. It's been around over a decade now and not a single person has reported anything malicious with WhatPulse whatsoever.
You have to be annoyingly paranoid to think WhatPulse is a keylogger.
Dude, you didn't read what I said. I wasn't agreeing or disagreeing with you. If anything I was backing up what you said about it being secure.
i don't care if its not a keylogger, it doesn't interest me enough. It also would go against most security policies companies have in place, which is where most of us do the majority of our typing.
interestingly enough I went browsing for other similar threads like this and came across quite a few of someone keen to setup a team and then a bombardment of negativity towards the software right away. I do feel somewhat sorry for the creators as they have a hard wall to overcome in order to win over more users.
It does make you wonder the mentality of some though, they would happily reject this software and begin the keylogger witchhunt towards the OP, but then are quite happy downloading shit with their Utorrent software that has more backdoors than a smugglers den.
The difference between this and a browser, is that buying stuff online gives me a much greater reward for the risk. They promise they only count - maybe they do. I'm not saying this isn't safe, I'm just saying that for what it is, for me personally it's not worth it. When I refer to vulnerabilities, I could be referring to any part of the chain, not just the client app. And yes, I am a C/C++ programmer by trade, not just some ignorant person that screams exaggeration![]()