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Posted by keme on December 18, 2006, 1:47 pm
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Fk skrev:
> I have been communicating with a woman who is in the process of
> getting a divorce. She is a schoolteacher in a small town population a
> little over 1000. Unfortunately her husband will be living their some
> time till. He objects highly to our communication and snoops in her
> computer. He may have installed a key logger. He forges mail from me
> to her telling her I'm dumping her, to me telling me I'm dumped. He
> uninstalled skype and deletes her new email accounts shortly after she
> makes a new one. He is real mad now and is severely restricting her
> access to her own computer. Her alternatives are the computer at the
> school and the local public library. To solve the problem of
> communication to her I have on my www site a discreet link to a
> password protected word document. She can read this from any computer
> that can read a password protected word document. Even if her husband
> learned the password he could only read it. He could not modify it or
> delete it.
> To solve the temporary problem of her communicating to me I have been
> considering adding a guest book to one of my web pages. It would need
> to be one where anyone could leave a message without requiring a log
> in or an e-mail address or password. Then she could also use her
> computer at home - when her loving husband permitted it. It would need
> to be a guest book that did not restrict the number of messages she
> wrote in a given time period. Messages from her would be deleted as
> soon as I read them so even if he learned of it he would probably miss
> out on the most.
> Can anyone recommend a free guest book that I could use?
> Is their another approach that we could use?
> She is not a computer expert so hunting after and removing key
> loggers, spy ware etc he installs is not an option. Intervention by
> the police, lawyers etc are also not options she is interested in.
> Is their any way I could make an email account where she (he) could
> not change the password?
> It is important that it is simple for her, dose not require installing
> software on the school or public library computer. It is also
> preferable that it not leave all to many traces on these computers.
>
If she can still boot the computer from CD, it should be possible to
make a live CD and store the personal info on a USB key. Setting this up
requires some skill, but it can probably be made to be as easy to use as
what she has now. The beauty of it is that its use most likely cannot be
detected on the computer.
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