taltamir
Lifer
- Mar 21, 2004
- 13,576
- 6
- 76
I would say it simply accesses the ram directly bypassing the windows memory stack completely. (and also has another module to access it via windows, and then combines the two)...
OR, alternitavely, it could patch the kernel, many programs were known to patch the windows kernel in windows XP, which was often a problem (This is why you couldn't run more than one anti virus program, they both try to patch the kernel and the result is kernel corruption)
Is it windows 7 or windows vista that introduced blocks against kernel patching?
OR, alternitavely, it could patch the kernel, many programs were known to patch the windows kernel in windows XP, which was often a problem (This is why you couldn't run more than one anti virus program, they both try to patch the kernel and the result is kernel corruption)
Is it windows 7 or windows vista that introduced blocks against kernel patching?