orifice well tester - meaning and definition. What is orifice well tester
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What (who) is orifice well tester - definition

COMPUTER PROGRAM DESIGNED FOR REMOTE SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION
Back orifice; BackOrifice; Back Orifice (trojan horse); KVM (backdoor orifice)

All's Well That Ends Well         
  • A 1794 print of the final scene
  • A copy of Boccaccio's ''The decameron containing an hundred pleasant nouels. Wittily discoursed, betweene seauen honourable ladies, and three noble gentlemen'', printed by [[Isaac Jaggard]] in 1620.
PLAY BY SHAKESPEARE
All's Well that Ends Well; All's well that ends well; Capilet; Parolles; All's well that ends well (proverb); Alls Well That Ends Well; All's Well That End's Well; All's Well, that Ends Well
All's Well That Ends Well is a play by William Shakespeare, published in the First Folio in 1623, where it is listed among the comedies. There is a debate regarding the dating of the composition of the play, with possible dates ranging from 1598 to 1608.
H. E. Tester         
  • The cover of ''Denmark's numeral cancellations 1852-1884'' by Tester and Hansen.
DANISH CHEMIST AND PHILATELIST
H.E. Tester
Henry E. Tester (1905 – 31 January 1986) was a Danish chemist and philatelist who, in 1982, with Sigurd Ringström, was awarded the Crawford Medal by the Royal Philatelic Society London for parts I and II of The private ship letter stamps of the world.
well-ordered set         
TOTAL ORDER SUCH THAT EVERY NONEMPTY SUBSET OF THE DOMAIN HAS A LEAST ELEMENT
Well-ordered set; Well-ordered; Well-ordering; Well ordered; Well ordering; Well-ordering property; Wellorder; Wellordering; Well ordered set; Wellordered; Well ordering theory; Well ordering property; Well-Ordering; Well-Ordered; Well-orderable set; Well order
<mathematics> A set with a total ordering and no infinite descending chains. A total ordering "<=" satisfies x <= x x <= y <= z => x <= z x <= y <= x => x = y for all x, y: x <= y or y <= x In addition, if a set W is well-ordered then all non-empty subsets A of W have a least element, i.e. there exists x in A such that for all y in A, x <= y. Ordinals are isomorphism classes of well-ordered sets, just as integers are isomorphism classes of finite sets. (1995-04-19)

Wikipedia

Back Orifice

Back Orifice (often shortened to BO) is a computer program designed for remote system administration. It enables a user to control a computer running the Microsoft Windows operating system from a remote location. The name is a play on words on Microsoft BackOffice Server software. It can also control multiple computers at the same time using imaging.

Back Orifice has a client–server architecture. A small and unobtrusive server program is on one machine, which is remotely manipulated by a client program with a graphical user interface on another computer system. The two components communicate with one another using the TCP and/or UDP network protocols. In reference to the Leet phenomenon, this program commonly runs on port 31337.

The program debuted at DEF CON 6 on August 1, 1998 and was the brainchild of Sir Dystic, a member of the U.S. hacker organization Cult of the Dead Cow. According to the group, its purpose was to demonstrate the lack of security in Microsoft's Windows 9x series of operating systems.

Although Back Orifice has legitimate purposes, such as remote administration, other factors make it suitable for illicit uses. The server can hide from cursory looks by users of the system. Since the server can be installed without user interaction, it can be distributed as the payload of a Trojan horse.

For those and other reasons, the antivirus industry immediately categorized the tool as malware and appended Back Orifice to their quarantine lists. Despite this fact, it was widely used by script kiddies because of its simple GUI and ease of installation.

Two sequel applications followed it, Back Orifice 2000, released in 1999, and Deep Back Orifice by French Canadian hacking group QHA.