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Anti-virus and Computer Security
by The F@t Guy
Item2010 Anti-Malware *Picks*
Our best of the best for 2010


Navigate:

Item The Tourist
Staying out of the seedy side of town...

Item  The DOH!  Moment
Overcoming your Bart Simpson side...

Item  Anonymityville  Horror
  Protecting your  identity...

Item The BIG DAWGS
Anti- virus, anti- trojan, anti- spyware...
 I am so confused!


Item Closing Windows
Using "other" programs will help
more than you think!


Item Locking Doors
Mmm...Firewall...Gooood!

 

Section News:

123009: Our Anti-virus picks for 2010 are up already!
 


Introduction:


There is a bit of comparison between my house and my computer where security is concerned:

The little western town I live in used to be a slice of Americana- Everybody knew everybody, and those you didn't know were raised with the same country-western values. You didn't have to worry too much about people stealing things, and you always left the doors open on hot summer nights to let the breeze through. Sure, there's a Smith & Wesson in close proximity, and the dog is big (and mean enough to those he doesn't know), but those were just fail-safe features, far more likely to be implemented upon a skunk or a raccoon in the garbage than for use against a real human bean...

But my little town is growing exponentially. Too many city-folk are moving here and bringing big-city problems along with them. It isn't safe leaving the doors unlocked anymore. *Sigh*. But then, that's what doors are for, I guess.

The internet (town) and your computer (house) can be looked at in much the same way. When the technology was young it was idyllic, at least from the point of hazards. But as it grew, the crime-rate grew too.  Things that were "unheard of" are done all the time now. The care-free days are over now, and one must take precautions, that much is obvious.

Furthermore,  I don't know about you, but I am fairly careful about who I invite into my home.  I try pretty hard to be hospitable and all, but there are just some people I really wouldn't want to bring home to meet the wife and kids.  These are people I meet that are fine to be passing... Hail fellow, well met, and all that. But that doesn't mean I want them in my living-room sucking down my ice tea and eating all my Cheetos (puffy, of course, and slightly stale)... and that's exactly why I don't invite them over.

In the same way, it wasn't a bad thing to reply to anyone (let them in to your house) in the old days on the net (town). You knew many of the people you were communicating with, and most abided by the rules. But, the times have changed. many sleazy vendors are knocking at your door (e-mail, IM), and there are all sorts of people doing any number of awful things to anyone who is foolish or inexperienced enough to wander into their sites. Times have changed, indeed.
 
By the same token, even though my little town is changing, and things might be a bit different, there's no sense in run-away paranoia either.

I would find it uncomfortable and boring to lay prone beside my overturned couch with my gun trained endlessly at the front door on the off-chance that some bad guy might decide to break in.
 
I don't lock the doors inside the house. I don't want to get up and unlock the door between the kitchen and the living-room every time I send one of the kids in to fetch me a soda. Why, that'd kinda ruin the whole purpose of having kids, wouldn't it? I might as well just go get the dang soda myself.

Of course, there are exceptions. There's a door and a lock on the bathroom, and my family would probably vote to keep those privacies in place. Everyone would like at least nominal privacy while dressing and etc, so there are locks on the bedroom doors too... But for the most part, the interior of my house is reasonably open and easy to get around in.

There are some who will certainly disagree, but I think computers and even local networks should be much the same way- Security is certainly necessary. In fact, it should always be a primary concern; But the rampant paranoia about security in computing is quite like the couch/gun/prone thing, or locking every single door in your house, each with a different key.

As with your house, there are sensible precautions to take- Locks on the doors and Windows, a Smith & Wesson, a big dog...

This article hopes to describe the happy medium, the right things to do for protection with the minimum amount of discomfort.

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