My state-wide teaching tour continues next Monday, February 13, 2012, 6:30 p.m. at the Belle Isle Library in Oklahoma City.
The class, “Fight the Internet Bad Guys and Win!” will teach you how to defeat the Internet bad guys who want to mess with your life. The class is free, one night only, and will last about 90 minutes. If you use a computer, you should attend. Visit my website for more details.
One area we discuss in the class is antivirus software, and the fact that antivirus software alone is not enough to keep you safe. Many PC users have been lulled into a false sense of security by thinking that, because they have an antivirus program installed, they can do anything they want on the Internet.
The Internet bad guys are very smart guys, and they think up new and innovative ways to mess up people’s computers every day; simply installing a “set it and forget it” antivirus program tacked on top of a firewall will not protect you against their nefarious schemes. If you want to enjoy a safe computing experience, you are going to have to change your behavior. If you want to keep your computer off of the repair bench, you may need to stop doing some things that you’ve been thoughtlessly doing for years.
Thing To Stop Doing #1: stop installing programs and applications downloaded from unknown sources on the Internet. Most viruses these days don’t come from email attachments; they come from websites. Just because someone writes a convincing blurb on some website about how great something is does not mean that you should do what they say.
The worst examples of this that I’ve seen lately are the thousands of innocent-looking websites that, as soon as you land on their page, an “alert” starts flashing obnoxiously. This important-looking alert says that a virus has been detected on your computer, and to “click here” to fix the problem. As soon as you “click there,” your computer is infected with a nasty piece of virus-like software that constantly annoys you with popups. Most antivirus programs have a hard time dealing with this problem.
Some of the fastest-growing areas fraught with danger are social networking websites such as MySpace and Facebook. These Frankenstein-like websites have grown so rapidly that their owners can no longer effectively protect their users. One scam that was big a while back was the “I want my old Facebook back” movement. Facebook programmers, in an effort to improve their website, started forcing users towards the “new” Facebook, which featured a completely different look and functionality. This upset a great many Facebook users, who preferred things the way they were before. Scammers exploited this resentment by announcing various ways that users could “get the old Facebook back.” Over 700,000 users blindly followed dubious instructions that were posted to numerous Facebook pages, only to find that, instead of getting their old Facebook back, they had been conned into secretly installing an ad-laden entertainment search application. That’s one of the more harmless scams that have been run on unwitting Facebook users.
Be advised that antivirus programs are going to have a hard time protecting your computer if you keep opening the door and inviting the bad guys in. Do a little research before you install anything from the Internet, and be suspicious of everything.