A shopping video and eBay promotion are part of Microsoft’s effort to give IE 6 users a reason to upgrade. The company also is trying to move corporate customers away.
Originally posted at Deep Tech
A shopping video and eBay promotion are part of Microsoft’s effort to give IE 6 users a reason to upgrade. The company also is trying to move corporate customers away.
Originally posted at Deep Tech
The software maker is looking into reports that some users’ systems aren’t working right after installing the latest Windows security updates.
Originally posted at Beyond Binary
If you are doubtful about your ISP bills and want to monitor your Internet Bandwidth usage, in case you want to be notified about excessive Internet usage or want to check whether any suspicious activities is being carried out on your computer through virus or spyware or somebody else in your absense, or simply want to find out how slow or fast your internet connection is, then you may be in need of a good Internet Bandwidth Monitoring tool.
There are lots of monitoring software available, some are online and some are offline, some are paid while some are free. Today, we will tell you about a freeware Internet Bandwidth Monitoring Tool Download, which does the job just perfectly.
NetWorx is a simple and free, yet powerful tool that helps you objectively evaluate your bandwidth situation. You can use it to collect bandwidth usage data and measure the speed of your Internet or any other network connection. NetWorx can help you identify possible sources of network problems, ensure that you do not exceed the bandwidth limits specified by your ISP, or track down suspicious network activity characteristic of Trojan horses and hacker attacks.
The program allows you to monitor all your network connections or a specific network connection (such as Ethernet or PPP) only. The software also features a system of highly customizable visual and sound alerts. You can set it up to alert you when the network connection is down or when some suspicious activity, such as unusually heavy data flow, occurs. It can also automatically disconnect all dialup connections and shut down the system.
The incoming and outgoing traffic is represented on a line chart and logged to a file, so that you can always view statistics about your daily, weekly and monthly bandwidth usage and dialup duration. The reports can be exported to a variety of formats, such as HTML, MS Word and Excel, for further analysis.
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As the holiday season begins, Larry Magid offers some tips on safe holiday shopping.
Originally posted at Safe and Secure
Planning on getting a new computer this holiday season? Stay safe into the New Year with the overhauled Download.com Security Starter Kit for 2010.
Originally posted at The Download Blog
By Daniel Armao, Security Advisor (Guest Blogger)
As many of you know, “Cyber Monday,” the Internet’s equivalent of “Black Friday,” is typically the biggest online shopping day of the year, marked by major discounts and promotions from online retailers. For many consumers this time of the year can offer up a golden opportunity for some great online deals. However, it’s important to be aware of the plethora of Internet shopping scams, hacker attacks, fraudulent emails, and phishing schemes that often run rampant as well.
But don’t fret, you can still enjoy the convenience of online shopping by following a few simple rules:
v Do not click the link provided in the email because the scammer can change the direction of the link's destination even if the link appears to be correct.
v Websites that are SSL secured which will encrypt sensitive information such as credit card numbers during the transaction. You can also click on the padlock icon to verify the identity of the certificate owner.
v Make your password complex by adding uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, and special characters such as %#$^@\
v Make your password longer than 8 characters
v Consider a passphrase, such as “8 hens ride 6 buses!” to make your password harder to guess. Consider customizing a single password for each different Web site by using a memorable website characteristic. For example, if your website is Amazon.com, and your password is “8 hens ride 6 buses!” try “8 hens ride 6 AMA buses.” For Citibank, it would be “8 hens ride 6 CIT buses.”
By Daniel Armao, Security Advisor (Guest Blogger)
As many of you know, “Cyber Monday,” the Internet’s equivalent of “Black Friday,” is typically the biggest online shopping day of the year, marked by major discounts and promotions from online retailers. For many consumers this time of the year can offer up a golden opportunity for some great online deals. However, it’s important to be aware of the plethora of Internet shopping scams, hacker attacks, fraudulent emails, and phishing schemes that often run rampant as well.
But don’t fret, you can still enjoy the convenience of online shopping by following a few simple rules:
v Do not click the link provided in the email because the scammer can change the direction of the link's destination even if the link appears to be correct.
v Websites that are SSL secured which will encrypt sensitive information such as credit card numbers during the transaction. You can also click on the padlock icon to verify the identity of the certificate owner.
v Make your password complex by adding uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numbers, and special characters such as %#$^@\
v Make your password longer than 8 characters
v Consider a passphrase, such as “8 hens ride 6 buses!” to make your password harder to guess. Consider customizing a single password for each different Web site by using a memorable website characteristic. For example, if your website is Amazon.com, and your password is “8 hens ride 6 buses!” try “8 hens ride 6 AMA buses.” For Citibank, it would be “8 hens ride 6 CIT buses.”
By John Gable, Director of Consumer Product Marketing
Yesterday, Microsoft Security Advisory (977981) confirmed the latest IE browser exploit. Though this only impacts users of IE 6 and IE 7, those browsers are still very widely used (last number I saw suggested a 40% installed base though that number is shrinking).
“Summoner” is an unpatched Microsoft Explorer vulnerability that tries to access, or “summon from the dead”, a deleted object. That causes IE to exit into a vulnerable state where malicious code can execute. That malicious code can be just about anything: spyware, viruses, you name it.
Although antivirus (including ZoneAlarm’s antivirus) catches known variants of the malicious code, it most likely will not catch other variants that are sure to come which are designed to by-pass traditional antivirus security.
ZoneAlarm’s browser security in ZoneAlarm Extreme Security and ZoneAlarm ForceField can protect you even from unknown variants of this attack. Just turn on browser virtualization if it is not on already. Like other browser exploits including Gumblar and Nine-Ball, any malicious code that is silently installed onto your PC through a vulnerability stays within a virtual sandbox, keeping it separate from your operating system. Your system remains unharmed.
This is just the latest browser exploit getting some attention. It is certainly not the last.
PS. “Summoner” is known by many other names. (There is no “naming authority” for malware like this.) It has many technical designations, including Exploit.HTML.IframeBof (Kaspersky Lab), Exploit-IFRAME BO.demo (McAfee), Downloader.Trojan (Symantec), Exploit.IframeBO (Doctor Web), JS/IframeBOShell* (RAV), EXPL_IFRAMEBO.A (Trend Micro), HTML/Expl.IframeBof3 (H+BEDV), HTML/IFrameBoF@expl (FRISK), IFrame (ALWIL), Exploit.Html.Iframe.Bof.Gen (SOFTWIN), Exploit.HTML.IFrameBOF-3 (ClamAV)
Glimpse into events of September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks comes from pager messages that have been anonymously published on WikiLeaks.org.
Originally posted at News – Politics and Law
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