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Anti-virus
and Computer Security
by The F@t Guy
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The Tourist - Staying out of the seedy side of town.
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The "Tourist"
Being from the Wild, Wild West, I see alot of tourists. They are
painfully easy to pick out of a crowd, you know. The locals just
look... well... local, and any who don't look local are immediately
considered "tourists".
I suppose I would be the same way in a big-city... gawking at the
skyscrapers just like the hick I am. Anyone who sticks out that much,
anyone who is obviously from
out-of-town make for a good "mark" for the local thugs and hawkers.
It isn't that these folks are actually stupid, or gullible. It is
just that they are woefully out of their element, and are blissfully
unaware of it.
Not that they all are, mind you. Anyone from a mountain state or
province tends to fit in well here (other than license plates), having
the same Western/Mountain drawl and clothes, and tend toward local
haunts rather than the touristy traps by nature (they all have the same
touristy traps in their towns too). They are, for all intensive
porpoises, unrecognizable from the natives, and are therefore not
a "mark" for the thugs. We'll call these folks "Visitors" rather than "Tourists"...
There's another whole batch: Blue-collar folk from the cities,
country-folk from the Mid-western farmlands, the South, and the
South-Western deserts, who are definitely out of their element and
immediately spotted as tourists; But their respective cultures are
compatible with ours... They naturally just "know most of the ropes" as
it were, because they were raised in much the same way as folks are
here. While out of their element, they are aware of the fact, admit the
fact, ask for specific help from the locals, and proceed with
caution. These are welcomed as a type of distant "kin", taken under
wing,
and steered away from the attractiveness of the touristy stuff and
guarded from the thugs- Their occasional faux-pas would be overlooked
or corrected politely, as they would do for me if I were in their town.
These are not "tourists" per se, so are promoted to "Visitors" as well.
But God help the "Tourist", cuz no one else will. He thinks that since
he read all the tourism board pamphlets that he is an expert on all
things Montana. He thinks that since he bought a ten dollar
factory-shaped straw hat to wear with his green Hawaiian shirt,
store-bought brown shorts, black socks and loafers, that he "fits in".
He is inordinately proud of his gigantic motor-home, but has
absolutely no idea how to herd it down a narrow two-lane mountain pass.
He has more money than everybody, is therefore "better", and haughtily
believes he knows better than us about everything from animal husbandry
and conservation to gun-control and forestry. Stupid hicks.
The point I am getting at (in my normal round-about way):
Look at the internet in the same way
you would when visiting another place, perhaps a town in a distant
state or country. There is a definite culture, way different than you are
used to. There are vast vistas of scenery, a wonderful downtown area
with all sorts of institutional attractions: huge shopping centers and
malls, libraries, zoos and museums. But there's a gaudy strip full of
tourist traps too, and the seedy, across-the-tracks part of town as well.
And there's lots of folks. Most are probably alot like you- just
normal joes going about their business, but there are thugs and
hawkers too, just like there is anywhere. You must be careful when in a strange place.
Now, if you are new in town, and you stick your head out of your door at
the Motel 6, there is probably alot of stuff you'd recognize. There's a
Wally World, there's a K-Marche', there's a Mac's Diner... Places like
these are the same everywhere. I am sure you would be quite comfortable
walking right into any one of these in your strange new town, wouldn't
you? You could be confident of what you'll find there, they are the same, no matter where you go...
Maybe you need some stamps for your post cards... You would feel pretty
safe going to the post office, eh? Yep, the government is much
the same everywhere... sad to say, but you can be pretty sure of
yourself at any post office or library.
But what about the BIG venues, though, the ones you came to see? Places
like the national parks, the theme parks, the zoos and museums, the
malls and plazas? They are a bit touristy - I guess you would expect that-
but they are in business to make you want to come back- so generally
these would be no different than anywhere else... offering the same ol'
chunked and formed "hotel-hospitality" that you have grown to expect
from
such places.
These types of places are
exactly what you'd expect them to be on the internet as well- For the
beginner who is trying to learn the ropes, he can feel pretty confident that
he will not be accosted by anything more dangerous than a cookie or
two. The major stores, news outlets, government sites, parks,
museums, manufacturers, and so on are all most probably FINE.
It's the "See the World's Biggest Ball of Earwax" places that you
really have to watch out for. Just like real life tourist traps,
Internet tourist traps try to attract your eye... bouncy things, blinky
things, free, Free, FREE!!! You know the schtick-
And we're all susceptable to it at first, just as we are
prone to the touristy stuff in a strange town. These kinds of places
don't rely on their reputation (in fact they prefer you don't know their reputation). They will often pack up and leave in
the middle of the night and set up in the next town over, under a different name, like they do in real life.
The Red light district is another place to avoid. As in real
life, there's no telling what strange diseases you'll wind up with if
you participate in the brothels and gambling dens of the internet. There are muggers in every alley, too. Go
there if you like, but you are on your own. Like in real life, it's a bad place to be, just like your mamma told you.
But what about the big, gray, squishy, middle? The stuff that isn't a
"big venue" but isn't exactly "tourist trap"? Just like our strange
town, the flavor of the town isn't in the big venues, and it certainly
isn't on the strip (well, Vegas, mebbe). It's the greasy-spoon around
the corner where the locals gather. It's the out-of-the-way fishin'
hole. It's a walk down a quiet residential sidewalk, waiving at the
folks sitting on the porch. That's where you'll find a taste of the
town. How do you find the good places like these?
Just like in a strange town, you need one of the locals to show you
around. Maybe you have a friend who is an internet veteran, which would
be the best scenario... Not necessarily a guru, mind you, but one who
has been around awhile and can help you out. That would be
like knowing someone in your new town who lives there and will
take you on as a guest. How nice that would be, to have someone to
guide the tour.
Perhaps that isn't available to you, though. Maybe you are on your own
and must find things out for yourself. That just means you have to
approach a "local" and ask about things, which usually means finding a
forum where you can
ask your questions...
Either way. you wind up "asking the locals",
dontcha'?
This is a really important thing to know, and it is exactly as it would
be in that strange town: Just wandering around aimlessly will (with an
utmost certainty) land you in a bad part of town. That is just how it
works... I don't know why, but it is true. Every novice's box that
passes through the "PIT of DOOOOM!!!" has the same "free icons", "free
recipes", "internet pets", "desktop weather/time gizmos", "free games",
and etcetera, and are filled to overflowing with every kind of spyware,
adware and virus that one could possibly have.
It is really kinda funny (odd, not ha-ha). They are drawn as inexorably
to the flashy, bouncy, blinky internet tourist traps as the tourists
are drawn to them in every freeway-town in real life. They are
not cautious travelers. Sure, they read the pamphlets that came in
the computer carton, but that has never been enough- not ever, in
anything, in any way. Pamphlets suck, ya know?
They need to have a calloused eye, and ask for directions from the locals:
Look for help pages (such as these). Try to understand the web and the
computer before you head out in earnest. Look for pages built
specifically for novices (look for Newbie, Noob, Noobie). They are all
over the place. Even when you master one thing, such as "surfing from a
search engine", find other help to break you into the next thing you'd
like to know, such as e-mail or instant messaging... the learning goes
on.
Wonder BEFORE you wander.
Find a forum or two and just hang out (called lurking). There are
forums for everything under the sun. Often you don't even need to ask a
question, but just absorb the stuff that others have asked before you.
Often you can find out alot about a software before you even download
it by just visiting the software's dedicated forum.
Sooner or later, though, your inquiry will lead you to pose a question, be it in a forum or tech support e-mail:
Remember what I said up at the start of all this about Locals,
Visitors, and Tourists? Can you see where I am going here?
If you are a novice at computing/internet, you are _NOT_ one of the
"locals", you can bet on that. The locals will barely lay eyes on you
and they will know for sure that you aren't "born-and-raised".
That's a fact.
The "Visitors from other Mountain Towns" folks would be those of one
specialty looking into another- Like a guy who is really into digital
movies trying to figure out the best way to implement digital
music... These folks do already fit in,
as in the analogy above, so are quite acceptable to the music community
they are inquiring from. Unless you are one of these, don't try to pass
yourself off as such.
Hopefully you'll be like the out-of-towner who is aware of his
shortcomings and inquires specifically and politely, taking correction
at the occasional faux-pas, and learning as you go- Most folks will
gladly give you a hand, just as it should be.
I said "hopefully"... Because if you are not one of the three already mentioned, that only leaves one other choice...
Whatever you do... Don't be a TOURIST!
::TFG
(c)
F@t Guy Utilities 2005-2010
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