India Broadband Forum


Top 5 myths of surfing safely

This is a discussion on Top 5 myths of surfing safely within the Computer Security forums, part of the Computer technology category; Recently PC Magazine conducted a survey that asked participants to rate their broadband ISP services. We found out that many ...

Go Back   India Broadband Forum > Computers > Computer technology > Computer Security

India Broadband Forum


                      

Reply

 

LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 07-19-09, 03:51 PM   #1
Platinum Member
 
strider's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Minas Tirth, Middle Earth
Posts: 1,093
Rep Power: 5
strider is a jewel in the roughstrider is a jewel in the roughstrider is a jewel in the rough
Arrow Top 5 myths of surfing safely

Recently PC Magazine conducted a survey that asked participants to rate their broadband ISP services. We found out that many users don't completely understand the seriousness of potential threats or how to protect their PCs. The following are responses to the top five security misconceptions we encountered.

I don't keep important things on my PC, so I don't have to worry about security.


There was a time when this statement was partially true, but that time has long since passed. Current viruses, worms, and other threats, including the famous Love Bug, Nimda, and Blaster, spread blindly across the Internet to thousands or millions of PCs in a matter of hours, without regard for who owns them, what is stored there, or the value of the information they hold. The purpose of such attacks is nothing less than to wreak havoc. If you ignore the reality of these attacks, you are certain to be hit at one time or another. Even if your computer is not attacked directly, it can be used as a zombie to launch a denial-of-service or other attack on a network or to send spam or pornography to other PCs without being traced. Therefore, your civic responsibility is to protect your PC so that others are protected.

I can protect my PC if I disconnect from the Internet or turn it off when I'm not using it.

Wrong. If you connect to the Internet at all, you are a target. You could download a virus when you connect and not activate it until days later when you read your e-mail off-line. Even if you rarely connect to the Internet, you can get a virus from a file off of a network, floppy disk, or USB flash memory drive.

I can protect myself from viruses by not opening suspicious e-mail attachments.

Wrong again. The next virus you get may come from your best friend's or boss' computer if his e-mail address book was used to propagate an attack. Nimda and other hybrid worms can enter through the Web browser. And it is possible to activate some viruses simply by reading or previewing an e-mail. You simply must have a PC-based antivirus package.

I have a Macintosh (or a Linux-based system), not a Windows system, so I don't have to worry about being attacked.

It is true that most attacks target Microsoft Windows?based PCs, but there have been attacks against Mac OS and Linux systems as well. Some experts have predicted that the Mac virus problem will get worse, because Mac OS X uses a version of Unix. And although these systems have some useful security features, they can still be attacked.

My system came with an antivirus package, so I'm protected.

Not quite. First, if you haven't activated your antivirus package to scan incoming traffic automatically, you are not protected against e-mail and Web browser attacks. Second, new threats appear daily, so an antivirus package is only as good as its last update. Activate the auto-update features to stay on top of the latest threats. Third, an antivirus package can't protect you from every threat. In most cases you need a combination of solutions, including, at minimum, antivirus, a personal firewall such as Zone Labs' ZoneAlarm Pro, and a plan for keeping your operating system and software up to date with security patches. Antispyware and antispam utilities will also help keep you safe.
strider is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 07-19-09, 04:55 PM   #2
meetdilip
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default

True. I have seen many who claim their system is protect since they have an antivirus and it is updated regularly. They refuse to accept that antivirus in the last word in virus protection.
  Reply With Quote
Reply

Tags
myths, safely, surfing, top

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may post new threads
You may post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads

Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
The biggest health myths busted saurav_k Health and Fitness 6 06-10-09 08:52 PM
Increase your surfing speed by 5 times meetdilip BSNL broadband 8 04-07-09 09:22 PM
Problem surfing rajan17_88 BSNL broadband 1 12-28-08 12:33 AM
Hard Drive Showing In Safely remove hardware option gurusam Computer Accessories 28 12-03-08 05:19 AM
New Surfing 2006 Scheme from mtnl triband Admin MTNL broadband 0 07-28-06 03:03 AM


All times are GMT +5.5. The time now is 09:31 AM.


India Broadband Forum