Posted on 10/25/2004 10:19:55 AM PDT by LouAvul
Internet users at home are not nearly as safe online as they believe, according to a nationwide inspection by researchers. They found most consumers have no firewall protection, outdated antivirus software and dozens of spyware programs secretly running on their computers.
One beleaguered home user in the government-backed study had more than 1,000 spyware programs running on his sluggish computer when researchers examined it.
Bill Mines, a personal trainer in South Riding, Va., did not fare much better. His family's 3-year-old Dell computer was found infected with viruses and more than 600 pieces of spyware surreptitiously monitoring his online activities.
"I was blown away," Mines said. "I had a lot of viruses and other things I didn't know about. I had no idea things like this could happen."
The Internet always has had its share of risky neighborhoods and dark alleys. But with increasingly sophisticated threats from hackers, viruses, spam e-mails and spyware, trouble is finding computer users no matter how cautiously they roam online.
(Excerpt) Read more at cbsnews.com ...
Articles like this make me think my son is correct: People need to get a license to operate a computer just like people need to get a license to operate a car.
I am into this kind of thing and in my opinion, the bad guys are definately winning.
Good spyware detectors?
Nope! Adware, Spyware, Spoofs and Phishing should be crimes. Making the innocent to respond to the immoral is counter to the public interest. Punish the guilty, not the innocent.
We have Norton anti virus detection on our computer. It detects attempted intrusions. I have had at least one attempt per week detected by the software program. It works well. I would be very careful about downloading any software program from the internet
Something has found its way into my computer, and has disabled all my spyware removal options. Pretty cute, eh? I'm going to take the darn thing back where I bought it and have the geeks clean it out.
People need to stop driving their Microsoft go-karts on the Internet and use an OS that takes security into account.
Whichever OS is on the most machines will be the target of hackers.
Boot up in safe mode and run your spyware checkers. If necessary, download the latest versions of spybot and adaware, get the latest updates, then run them in safe mode.
In fact, it has been reported that terrorists and criminals have been using unsecured wireless networks to cloak their online activity and to avoid being spotted in an internet cafe (which was revealed to be a common method they used for planning 9/11). But, with many hotels, cafes, and coffee shops installing wireless networks but not securing them, this has become an even more ripe method for terrorists and criminals to use the internet without some of the tracable method (i.e., an account).
(FULL DISCLOSURE: I own and operate a business that offers secured wireless solutions to residential and commercial properties. See my profile page for a link to my company).
MS has slipped to #3 in usage!
Mac is now #1!
Lots of idiots drive cars too.
I work on PC's for a living and we recenly had an XP PC with over 1100 infected files (Viruses and worms) and 900+ pieces of spyware and I was able to bring it back without a reinstall -- I used Mcaffee "Stinger" and "Ad Aware"
Locally one of our phone companies runs Mcaffee and they have a program called mail guard that scanns all incoming email for spam and viruses with my customers I then put the m on Norton so that their stuff gets scanned again with a second product.
With these changes my customers have had very little virus problems and are able to keep the spyware under control.
Here we go again!
In a "conservative", limited-government website no less. The first time a problem pops up, who do they turn to? More big government.
Don't you understand if you call on the government to do everything for you, they'll soon be running EVERYTHING? How is a license going to solve this problem? Tell me? All you'll do is empower another government agency. Would you like them controlling the internet by declaring who can and who can't get access and under what conditions?
No thanks!
Jeez... If all else fails... get off the web! Don't impose more government on us.
There's also this pesky 1st Amendment which SHOULD prevent this from happening (but who cares about that... huh? It's O.K. if it's for a conservative cause.)
Not at my house.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.