Doug Franklin wrote:
> 
> Tim Øsleby wrote:
> > Ann. Most likely your system already has XP service pack 2 installed. That's
> > the one update you will need if it isn't. Without it your computer is very
> > vulnerable.
> 
> As someone who works on security software for Windows and Linux, I'd
> strongly urge keeping up with Windows updates, even post XP SP2.  You
> only have to get "owned" once to have large amounts of your money
> disappear from your bank account or get added to your credit cards or
> your identity get stolen.  I do review the updates that they try to
> send, I keep good backups, I only install critical updates, and I always
> refuse to let Windows Genuine Advantage or its updates install.  But if
> Microsoft is issuing a patch for it, there's a good reason.

I hvae no credit cards listed on the web, fortunately.  I
dont buy ANYTHING
on line - well, I did once or twice, but I avoid it as a
whole.
IF someone tried to take "large amounts of money" from my
bank account they would
be in for a big surprise! LOL!

I dont use explorer - I took it off the desktop so I couldnt
even hit it by mistake.
I installed Firefox right away. 

While much of what you say I'm sure is right, I can't even
fathom it...

When I get on line I only go to my personal homepage, my
cafepress store,
photo.net, ebay and craigslist.  or to look at pics you guys
put up.

I never go to any sites have anything to do with
entertainment or sports -
I don't open attachments or forwarded mail.  

And I'm keeping my old dial up account for email - for a
while at least.

ann


> 
> Some of the vulnerabilities, especially some of the ones in Internet
> Explorer, are positively frightening, allowing "drive by" exploitation
> of your system.  That means the attacker plants the malware in such a
> way that you get infected by simply going to a reputable web page that
> has ads on it from a poorly defended or less than reputable ad system.
> 
> It's happened, too.  A year or two ago, the online IT technology (IT
> geek) newspaper "The Register" (http://www.theregister.co.uk or
> http://www.theregister.com) was using an ad service provider that got
> exploited. Just going to "The Register" web page and being unlucky
> enough to get one of the infected ads got your computer infected, IIRC,
> by a password stealer or spam engine (if you didn't have the proper
> patches installed).
> 
> A lot of the "virus" hype /is/ hype.  Shameless hype.  But some of it
> isn't.  Over the past couple of years there's been a definite and
> obvious shift in the motives of the purveyors of malware.  It's gone
> from more like graffiti or other vandalism to more like business (profit
> motive).
> 
> At the moment, there seems to be another shift underway, toward more
> focused attacks rather than the "shotgun approach".  The idea being to
> get the malware "under the radar" of the security monitoring folks.
> That means that, for example, the A/V engines don't get signatures for
> them because either the "virus sensors" out in the Internet never see
> the actual malware, or because the number of folks affected is "too small".
> 
> There have already been several of these sorts of targeted attacks in
> England and Scandinavia against specific banks.  Through a partnership
> with some customers, my development team is seeing a lot of this sort of
> activity right now.
> 
> --
> Thanks,
> DougF (KG4LMZ)
> 
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