Perhaps I was being a little ambitious, when I set out to create this
newsletter. It is the typical malady of most IT projects. When we
first went to press, I could see a need, and I some how found the time
to assemble my list of contacts, and the IT news that was being
overlooked. So much has transpired in last four months since the
first issue. In December, Paul Allen (Microsoft's co-founder)
sponsored the launch of the worlds' first
commercial suborbital spacecraft on the anniversary of the Wright
Brothers First Flight. That is also when the 108th Congress of the
US enacted the
Can-Spam Act of 2003, which was signed into law by President Bush
and went into effect on January 1st, 2004. Two incredible first
steps that will bring about changes in the years to come.
While these changes were taking place, I discovered that there are still
some internet users out there without firewalls and virus protection.
I made this discovery when the firewall on one of my web servers
automatically blocked an infected webmaster. The only way to stop
the Blasters and all the Sons of Blasters is to patch all the security
holes and stick with the best practices. Every Window's based PC
needs to run Windows Update on a weekly basis (see the menu choice
Tools, Windows Update on the Internet Explorer). Everyone, that
fails to keep their computer clean, runs the risk of being another worm
breeding, Email blasting zombie to clog up the Internet. The only
way were are going to get a handle on this is for everyone to do their
part.
Do not click on attachments unless you are expecting it and know what it
is. Up-to-date Anti-virus software and a firewall is hardly
adequate protection. They only protect against known threats.
New viruses are discovered every day most often after they have been
around for awhile. Email born viruses will also try to exploit your good
nature and your curiosity with various enticements. They can use
PIFs (Program Interface Files -- stuff like those icons on your desktop)
to invade your system. According to Microsoft the only way to view
the contents of a PIF is with a hexadecimal editor. Until our
recent urging NAV (Norton Anti-Virus) would not scan a PIF by right
clicking on it. Make note that Symantec does not Email updates
unless you submit a virus to them, and it may look almost identical to
the spoof we reported in the last eZine. Also note that an update
may detect an infected attachment and leave your system infected.
Some infections must be removed manually and some are un-repairable.
There is no excuse for having an infected machine. McAfee has a
free
online scanner, and there are free firewalls like
ZoneAlarm. Network Solutions has a downloadable file called
Stinger
that scans for and removes many common viruses and worms, including
recent threats like
MyDoom.B, which can masquerade as one of your friends and block
access to anti-virus update sites. Call on us, if you need help, to
install and configure these products or to clean your system. This
happens to be one of our sponsor's specialties. Also, if you
haven't done so already, do full backup your computer's current
operational state. That way if the worm bites or your system
fails, you will have something to fall back on, instead of doing a full
reinstall and reconfiguration of your computer. FYI, we use Norton
Ghost to backup the system drive on all of our computers. It is
really quite painless, runs in an unattended fashion and typically takes
less than 20 minutes to backup the entire system. All you need is
Ghost and another hard drive.
David Doyle James |
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