To register via SMS, follow these three simple steps:
To register for S-Pesa account, please visit SportPesa, read Terms and Conditions and text "ACCEPT" to 79079
A customer receives back a confirmation message providing him/her with Username, PIN and particular mobile operator Paybill #
Enjoy the Game!
We recommend to download our mobile app at:
https://www.ke.sportpesa.com/app
Checking and clicking OK removes the Zone Identifier entirely (deletes the ADS). The file then behaves as if it originated locally. 3. Office Macro & ActiveX Blocking Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint) reads the Zone Identifier. If you open a document downloaded from the internet ( ZoneId=3 ), Office opens it in Protected View —a read‑only, sandboxed mode that disables macros, editing, and external links until you explicitly click “Enable Editing.”
Before its introduction, a malicious .exe disguised as a “Invoice.pdf.exe” would run with full local trust. Users had no visual cue that the file was foreign. Attackers could embed dangerous macros in Office documents that would auto‑execute upon opening.
[ZoneTransfer] ZoneId=3 The ZoneId can be one of four values:
Unblock-File -Path "C:\path\to\file.exe"
| ZoneId | Name | Description | |--------|------|-------------| | 0 | My Computer | Local machine (trusted; rarely set by downloads) | | 1 | Local Intranet | Internal corporate network | | 2 | Trusted Sites | Sites explicitly added to Trusted Sites list | | 3 | Internet | The public web (default for most downloads) | | 4 | Restricted Sites | Potentially dangerous or blocked sites |
Similarly, Internet Explorer/Edge (legacy) blocks ActiveX controls on files marked from the Internet zone. Antimalware engines treat Internet‑zoned files with higher scrutiny. UAC prompts for such executables may include a more detailed warning about the file’s origin. The Security Rationale The Zone Identifier addresses a classic attack vector: social engineering via file download .
How the Zone Identifier Affects Downloads The Zone Identifier is not just a label—it triggers actual behavioral changes in Windows and applications. 1. SmartScreen & Reputation Checks When you double-click a downloaded executable ( .exe , .msi , .ps1 , etc.), Windows checks the Zone Identifier. If ZoneId=3 (Internet), SmartScreen evaluates the file’s reputation. Unknown or suspicious downloads trigger a full-screen red warning: “Windows protected your PC” . 2. The "Unblock" Checkbox Right-click a downloaded file → Properties . You will often see a security message at the bottom: “This file came from another computer and might be blocked to help protect this computer.” Next to it is an Unblock checkbox.
Checking and clicking OK removes the Zone Identifier entirely (deletes the ADS). The file then behaves as if it originated locally. 3. Office Macro & ActiveX Blocking Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint) reads the Zone Identifier. If you open a document downloaded from the internet ( ZoneId=3 ), Office opens it in Protected View —a read‑only, sandboxed mode that disables macros, editing, and external links until you explicitly click “Enable Editing.”
Before its introduction, a malicious .exe disguised as a “Invoice.pdf.exe” would run with full local trust. Users had no visual cue that the file was foreign. Attackers could embed dangerous macros in Office documents that would auto‑execute upon opening.
[ZoneTransfer] ZoneId=3 The ZoneId can be one of four values:
Unblock-File -Path "C:\path\to\file.exe"
| ZoneId | Name | Description | |--------|------|-------------| | 0 | My Computer | Local machine (trusted; rarely set by downloads) | | 1 | Local Intranet | Internal corporate network | | 2 | Trusted Sites | Sites explicitly added to Trusted Sites list | | 3 | Internet | The public web (default for most downloads) | | 4 | Restricted Sites | Potentially dangerous or blocked sites |
Similarly, Internet Explorer/Edge (legacy) blocks ActiveX controls on files marked from the Internet zone. Antimalware engines treat Internet‑zoned files with higher scrutiny. UAC prompts for such executables may include a more detailed warning about the file’s origin. The Security Rationale The Zone Identifier addresses a classic attack vector: social engineering via file download .
How the Zone Identifier Affects Downloads The Zone Identifier is not just a label—it triggers actual behavioral changes in Windows and applications. 1. SmartScreen & Reputation Checks When you double-click a downloaded executable ( .exe , .msi , .ps1 , etc.), Windows checks the Zone Identifier. If ZoneId=3 (Internet), SmartScreen evaluates the file’s reputation. Unknown or suspicious downloads trigger a full-screen red warning: “Windows protected your PC” . 2. The "Unblock" Checkbox Right-click a downloaded file → Properties . You will often see a security message at the bottom: “This file came from another computer and might be blocked to help protect this computer.” Next to it is an Unblock checkbox.