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Spyware and Malware defensive techniques.
Spyware and Malware defensive techniques.
Best practices: Stop using Internet Exporer. Find another browser. If you want to experiment with a free browser that needs no install then try Off By One: http://www.OffByOne.com This is THE fastest browser on earth. It doesn't do everything but many times you don't need everything. Use a HOSTS file and keep it up to date. Learn how he http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/ Stop using Outlook or Outlook Express. Find another email client. If you must use these email clients then send and receive in plain text only and turn off the preview pane. Never open email unless the subject line is relevant and compelling to you NEVER! Unless you specifically request someone to send you an attachment then do not open attachments NEVER! Stop downloading, running or installing things you do not absolutely need. If you do download scan it he http://www.virustotal.com/ or he http://virusscan.jotti.org/ before you install or run. Consider the possibility that every time you buy or use a Microsoft product you are making yourself a little less safe, your life more complicated and the world a little worse off. Consider buying, using other alternatives. This is better advice than you will ever receive from Microsoft or from many support people. -- pcbuilder98 |
Spyware and Malware defensive techniques.
pc.builder98 wrote:
Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Best practices: Wow, what an ego and most likely a closed mind. It's far from "best" practices and the "in the world" statements are almost funny if they weren't just blatant attempts at hyping. |
Spyware and Malware defensive techniques.
"PA Bear" wrote in message
... No browser is 100% safe! -- ~Robear Dyer (PA Bear) MS MVP-Windows (IE, OE, Security, Shell/User) AumHa VSOP & Admin http://aumha.net DTS-L.ORG http://66.39.69.143/ pc.builder98 wrote: Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Where did I say 100% safe? Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Best practices: Stop using Internet Exporer. Find another browser. If you want to experiment with a free browser that needs no install then try Off By One: http://www.OffByOne.com This is THE fastest browser on earth. It doesn't do everything but many times you don't need everything. Use a HOSTS file and keep it up to date. Learn how he http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/ Stop using Outlook or Outlook Express. Find another email client. If you must use these email clients then send and receive in plain text only and turn off the preview pane. Never open email unless the subject line is relevant and compelling to you NEVER! Unless you specifically request someone to send you an attachment then do not open attachments NEVER! Stop downloading, running or installing things you do not absolutely need. If you do download scan it he http://www.virustotal.com/ or he http://virusscan.jotti.org/ before you install or run. Consider the possibility that every time you buy or use a Microsoft product you are making yourself a little less safe, your life more complicated and the world a little worse off. Consider buying, using other alternatives. This is better advice than you will ever receive from Microsoft or from many support people. -- pcbuilder98 |
Spyware and Malware defensive techniques.
"Poprivet`" wrote in message
... pc.builder98 wrote: Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Best practices: Wow, what an ego and most likely a closed mind. It's far from "best" practices and the "in the world" statements are almost funny if they weren't just blatant attempts at hyping. If I tone it down to this is it OK: Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Good practices: Stop using Internet Exporer. Find another browser. If you want to experiment with a free browser that needs no install then try Off By One: http://www.OffByOne.com This is likely the fastest browser you will ever try. It doesn't do everything but many times you don't need everything. Use a HOSTS file and keep it up to date. Learn how he http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/ Stop using Outlook or Outlook Express. Find another email client. If you must use these email clients then send and receive in plain text only and turn off the preview pane. Never open email unless the subject line is relevant and compelling to you NEVER! Unless you specifically request someone to send you an attachment then do not open attachments NEVER! Stop downloading, running or installing things you do not absolutely need. If you do download scan it he http://www.virustotal.com/ or he http://virusscan.jotti.org/ before you install or run. Consider the possibility that every time you buy or use a Microsoft product you are making yourself a little less safe, your life more complicated and the world a little worse off. Consider buying, using other alternatives. This is better advice than you will ever receive from Microsoft or from many support people. -- pcbuilder98 |
Spyware and Malware defensive techniques.
"PA Bear" wrote in message
... X-post to OE6 NG deleted. -- ~Robear Dyer (PA Bear) MS MVP-Windows (IE, OE, Security, Shell/User) AumHa VSOP & Admin http://aumha.net DTS-L.ORG http://66.39.69.143/ Too late it's in Google: Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Good practices: Stop using Internet Exporer. Find another browser. If you want to experiment with a free browser that needs no install then try Off By One: http://www.OffByOne.com This is likely the fastest browser you will ever try. It doesn't do everything but many times you don't need everything. Use a HOSTS file and keep it up to date. Learn how he http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/ Stop using Outlook or Outlook Express. Find another email client. If you must use these email clients then send and receive in plain text only and turn off the preview pane. Never open email unless the subject line is relevant and compelling to you NEVER! Unless you specifically request someone to send you an attachment then do not open attachments NEVER! Stop downloading, running or installing things you do not absolutely need. If you do download scan it he http://www.virustotal.com/ or he http://virusscan.jotti.org/ before you install or run. Consider the possibility that every time you buy or use a Microsoft product you are making yourself a little less safe, your life more complicated and the world a little worse off. Consider buying, using other alternatives. This is better advice than you will ever receive from Microsoft or from many support people. -- pcbuilder98 |
Spyware and Malware defensive techniques.
pc.builder98 wrote:
"Poprivet`" wrote in message ... pc.builder98 wrote: Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Best practices: Wow, what an ego and most likely a closed mind. It's far from "best" practices and the "in the world" statements are almost funny if they weren't just blatant attempts at hyping. If I tone it down to this is it OK: Hmm, not really, for the most part. I am glad you aren't -openly- spamming though. But what I do still mind is your recommendations for unverified URLs with no reputations for competence of any kind but with lots of spam references in their past and current histories. If I were you, I'd distance myself from these places and move on to more reputable sources for your applications. Unless of course, this was actually a spam, in which case ... well, you know that drill. Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Good practices: Stop using Internet Exporer. Unnecessary, confusing to newbies and no good reasons to do so, especially since they cleaned up the defaults. Users won't like others because of the limitations if they know the limitations, which they will eventually learn anyway, and in no way addresses the real problem: Education. Find another browser. See above If you want to experiment with a free browser that needs no install then try Off By One: http://www.OffByOne.com This is likely the fastest browser you will ever try. It doesn't do everything but many times you don't need everything. One of several available that I know of. Not having ever heard of this one, I'm loathe to do the research it would require bothering with to determine whether it was even a safe download let alone functional enough to be useful. Same for the other mentions. It's rather trivial to write a text-only browser using an API and a few supporting lines of code these days. OTOH since I know what I want; I don't want the attendant limitations period. They CAN be useful though if one uses them thru a proxy - and never wants to render anything graphical, if they're sourced from reputable sources. I occasionally use them a couple of them in my spam fighting efforts when I need to verify something about a spamvertised site or even the spammer's site itself. Use a HOSTS file and keep it up to date. Learn how he http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/ Now that is outstanding advice, IFF it's coupled with the knowledge of how to keep it from slowing a system down. MVPS fortunately provides same, IFF a reader will read, which all too many don't and end up with silly questions about even the MVPS version with its excellent documentation. No, I am not an MVP. Stop using Outlook or Outlook Express. Find another email client. You said that already. If you must use these email clients then send and receive in plain text only and turn off the preview pane. OK. Better yet, learn how to use what you have. Burying one's self in 3rd party crapps and rumors is useless. Education again is the key. Never open email unless the subject line is relevant and compelling to you NEVER! Unless you specifically request someone to send you an attachment then do not open attachments NEVER! Most newbies and lots of longtime users find the phishing schemes and porn adds pretty compelling to them and also relevant when it's a phish about their own bank. The Subject line isn't the most important data: The From line AND the Subject, and whether or not you might expect that person to send you an e-mail are much better to judge things on. About 99.999% of cold contacts are spam, the rest just junk. Stop downloading, running or installing things you do not absolutely need. Good, though I don't know that the need has to be "absolute". It's more important to "know who" you're downloading from and whether or not they have a decent rep. Education again. And a little research. I don't "need" all of the applications I have and could do without some of them if I had to. But I don't have to, and I don't do without them. I do however know where they came from and the rep of the place they came from in all but one, which I researched first and ended up quite happy with. That little app was WinPatrol. If you do download scan it he http://www.virustotal.com/ or he http://virusscan.jotti.org/ before you install or run. Nonsense. I'd scan it right here on my machine as it arrives at my incoming port, before it hits my hard drive. I use relevant, reliable and up to date applications to do so. Eductation again, not taking the advice of some unknown entity. I'd never go to unknown URLs to check anything in that way but apparenlty, even though I should never read an e-mail, you say it's OK to go to sites I've never heard of because they were recommended by someone I've never heard of. Even if it had a decent rep like, say, Yahoo, realize that Yahoo allows spyware through their malware detectors AND virus detection, on purpose which other scanners do not. I'm talking specifically about GAIN and its repertoire here, but that's not the only one. Scanning just for viruses is completely unacceptable. Spyware and malware are a must to keep track of and off your machine. Some viruses can even be "invited" to come in as a result of spyware on your machine. Nothing should e ver be allowed to run covertly on a machine; never. It needs to ask for permission or it doesn't run. And that's where education comes in again. Consider the possibility that every time you buy or use a Microsoft product you are making yourself a little less safe, your life more complicated and the world a little worse off. Consider buying, using other alternatives. Not half as unsafe as I'd feel taking your advice and using any of those new to me, unknown URLs and what they might or might not deliver in the form of viruses, spyware and malware. This is better advice than you will ever receive from Microsoft or from many support people. I take it you include your MVPS HOSTS file recommendation in that too, since you include "support". No, actually, if you can read, you'll find Microsoft' advice very good and very useful for avoiding viruses and malware. Their information is much more inclusive than yours here, doesn't insist on single points for such protection, and makes several recommendations about how to manage the computer systems. I'm not necessarily in love with MS but I will admit that they document everything well and without misinformation. Their information can be verified if one wishes to, and is very consistant. Now, if the following list of lookups on your information isn't interesting from a white/black hat color, I don't know what is: Parsing input: 4.124.52.30 Routing details for 4.124.52.30 De-referencing abuse net level3.net = , Report routing for 4.124.52.30: , redirects to Parsing input: www.OffByOne.com Routing details for 74.208.48.100 [refresh/show] Cached whois for 74.208.48.100 : Using abuse net on abuse net 1and1.com = , Using best contacts Routing details for 74.53.201.162 [refresh/show] Cached whois for 74.53.201.162 : Using abuse net on abuse net theplanet.com = Using best contacts Parsing input: virusscan.jotti.org Routing details for 209.160.65.87 [refresh/show] Cached whois for 209.160.65.87 : Using abuse net on abuse net hopone.net = Using best contacts Parsing input: jotti.org Routing details for 24.132.142.63 [refresh/show] Cached whois for 24.132.142.63 : Using abuse net on abuse net chello.at = , Using best contacts while a lookup reports: Reporting addresses: Except for this last entry, each of those are known to be friendly to spammers and to have anything but white hats. That last one, being .at, would never get through to me anyway; it'd be blocked and forced to ask permission; which it wouldn't get. Again, it's all about education. So if you really want to provide some great information, begin educating the masses instead of sending people to god know what content at the URLs you give. Cheers |
Spyware and Malware defensive techniques.
Hi,
I think Safari claims the mantle of the "fastest" browser, but anything stripped down to a bare-bones is bound to out-perform an Addon bloated browser. Regards. "pc.builder98" wrote in message ... Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Best practices: Stop using Internet Exporer. Find another browser. If you want to experiment with a free browser that needs no install then try Off By One: http://www.OffByOne.com This is THE fastest browser on earth. It doesn't do everything but many times you don't need everything. Use a HOSTS file and keep it up to date. Learn how he http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/ Stop using Outlook or Outlook Express. Find another email client. If you must use these email clients then send and receive in plain text only and turn off the preview pane. Never open email unless the subject line is relevant and compelling to you NEVER! Unless you specifically request someone to send you an attachment then do not open attachments NEVER! Stop downloading, running or installing things you do not absolutely need. If you do download scan it he http://www.virustotal.com/ or he http://virusscan.jotti.org/ before you install or run. Consider the possibility that every time you buy or use a Microsoft product you are making yourself a little less safe, your life more complicated and the world a little worse off. Consider buying, using other alternatives. This is better advice than you will ever receive from Microsoft or from many support people. -- pcbuilder98 |
Spyware and Malware defensive techniques.
Hi,
I just downloaded and installed it. Any claims of speed performance are lost on this browser. It has no Address bar or Favorites or links list. Any rendering speed gains are lost with usability issues. By the time you have opened the Open web dialog, typed in a fully qualified url (no autocomplete) and then pressed Ok (no enter key activation on the web site drop-down), other browsers would have completed the download and rendering. Just goes to show how the fable of the Hare and the Tortise has real world advice. The fastest may not necessarily win the race. Regards. "pc.builder98" wrote in message ... Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Best practices: Stop using Internet Exporer. Find another browser. If you want to experiment with a free browser that needs no install then try Off By One: http://www.OffByOne.com This is THE fastest browser on earth. It doesn't do everything but many times you don't need everything. Use a HOSTS file and keep it up to date. Learn how he http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/ Stop using Outlook or Outlook Express. Find another email client. If you must use these email clients then send and receive in plain text only and turn off the preview pane. Never open email unless the subject line is relevant and compelling to you NEVER! Unless you specifically request someone to send you an attachment then do not open attachments NEVER! Stop downloading, running or installing things you do not absolutely need. If you do download scan it he http://www.virustotal.com/ or he http://virusscan.jotti.org/ before you install or run. Consider the possibility that every time you buy or use a Microsoft product you are making yourself a little less safe, your life more complicated and the world a little worse off. Consider buying, using other alternatives. This is better advice than you will ever receive from Microsoft or from many support people. -- pcbuilder98 |
Spyware and Malware defensive techniques.
From pcbuilder98's message headers:
X-Newsreader: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2800.1158 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2800.1165 It appears that he is running Windows XP with SP1, (circa 2003 version). I would never claim that Outlook Express or Internet Explorer are the best e-mail client and browser, (far from it). Nor would I disagree with someone that preferred to use different ones. I am only involved with newsgroups to help people with MS issues, not to tout MS products. But for someone to be so concerned with security, I find it amusing that he is lacking in about four years of updates. This version of IE/OE surely is a less secure version than it could be. What's that about taking advice "with a grain of salt"? -- Bruce Hagen MS-MVP Outlook Express Imperial Beach, CA "Rob ^_^" wrote in message ... Hi, I just downloaded and installed it. Any claims of speed performance are lost on this browser. It has no Address bar or Favorites or links list. Any rendering speed gains are lost with usability issues. By the time you have opened the Open web dialog, typed in a fully qualified url (no autocomplete) and then pressed Ok (no enter key activation on the web site drop-down), other browsers would have completed the download and rendering. Just goes to show how the fable of the Hare and the Tortise has real world advice. The fastest may not necessarily win the race. Regards. "pc.builder98" wrote in message ... Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Best practices: Stop using Internet Exporer. Find another browser. If you want to experiment with a free browser that needs no install then try Off By One: http://www.OffByOne.com This is THE fastest browser on earth. It doesn't do everything but many times you don't need everything. Use a HOSTS file and keep it up to date. Learn how he http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/ Stop using Outlook or Outlook Express. Find another email client. If you must use these email clients then send and receive in plain text only and turn off the preview pane. Never open email unless the subject line is relevant and compelling to you NEVER! Unless you specifically request someone to send you an attachment then do not open attachments NEVER! Stop downloading, running or installing things you do not absolutely need. If you do download scan it he http://www.virustotal.com/ or he http://virusscan.jotti.org/ before you install or run. Consider the possibility that every time you buy or use a Microsoft product you are making yourself a little less safe, your life more complicated and the world a little worse off. Consider buying, using other alternatives. This is better advice than you will ever receive from Microsoft or from many support people. -- pcbuilder98 |
Spyware and Malware defensive techniques.
"Rob ^_^" wrote in message
... "pc.builder98" wrote in message ... Spyware and Malware defensive techniques. Best practices: Stop using Internet Exporer. Find another browser. If you want to experiment with a free browser that needs no install then try Off By One: http://www.OffByOne.com This is THE fastest browser on earth. It doesn't do everything but many times you don't need everything. Use a HOSTS file and keep it up to date. Learn how he http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/ Stop using Outlook or Outlook Express. Find another email client. If you must use these email clients then send and receive in plain text only and turn off the preview pane. Never open email unless the subject line is relevant and compelling to you NEVER! Unless you specifically request someone to send you an attachment then do not open attachments NEVER! Stop downloading, running or installing things you do not absolutely need. If you do download scan it he http://www.virustotal.com/ or he http://virusscan.jotti.org/ before you install or run. Consider the possibility that every time you buy or use a Microsoft product you are making yourself a little less safe, your life more complicated and the world a little worse off. Consider buying, using other alternatives. This is better advice than you will ever receive from Microsoft or from many support people. -- pcbuilder98 Hi, I just downloaded and installed it. Any claims of speed performance are lost on this browser. It has no Address bar or Favorites or links list. Any rendering speed gains are lost with usability issues. By the time you have opened the Open web dialog, typed in a fully qualified url (no autocomplete) and then pressed Ok (no enter key activation on the web site drop-down), other browsers would have completed the download and rendering. Just goes to show how the fable of the Hare and the Tortise has real world advice. The fastest may not necessarily win the race. Regards. Any claims that you gave the browser a fair trial are false. Favorites are easily accessible. In the menubar click the seventh button from the right to view, select and visit any of your saved Favorites in your Favorites folder. Click the sixth button from the right to add the current web page you are visiting to your Favorites. You are correct. It is necessary to click the second button from the left to enter the web site address then press Return or click OK but since all your Favorites are easily available how often do you need to type in an address? YMMV and likely will. Try any browser you like. All of them are safer and more secure than Internet Explorer and some are faster too. -- pcbuilder98 |
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