Question:
What should I do about internet security?
2007-06-22 08:44:33 UTC
I share an internet connection with two other computers. They are both on Windows XP. My laptop is Windows Millenium Edition. The other computers have Norton Internet Security on them but it won't work on mine. Has anyone any ideas on what I should do please?
Twelve answers:
DPA1of8
2007-06-22 08:54:26 UTC
I run a Windows ME computer, lots of Internet use, without trouble.



You need at least anti-virus and spyware protection (firewall, too, unless your router is a hardware firewall--even then, maybe..)



Free for personal use (get them, and others, with Cnet editors' and users' reviews) from download.com: my choices (others are good and some will say better; mine work just fine on ME) are AVG Free for anti-virus, Ad-Aware and Spybot.



Good luck!
?
2016-08-21 02:06:09 UTC
2
2007-06-22 11:29:15 UTC
I have used AVG Anti Virus, Zone Alarm Firewall, Spy-bot Search and Destroy and Ad Aware both spyware killers for years. They are all free for personal use and I have had no trouble with Viruses Trojans etc. AVG does not slow the system down as much as some other products and Zone Alarm allows a lot of personal configuration unlike the Windows Firewall. They can all be downloaded from the following link. http://www.computeractive.co.uk/ On the home page select downloads and then the appropriate category.I also use Windows Defender from the Microsoft site. It is safe to use two anti-spy products but never use more than one A/V as it can cause conflicts. You should run A/V and anti spy weekly. Hope this helps.
2007-06-22 08:59:40 UTC
First off, you need to upgrade from Windows ME since it's no longer supported by Microsoft so you won't be able to get Windows updates. According to Microsoft, ME users are able to upgrade to Windows XP. Depending on the type and age of your computer you may have to fiddle with the BIOS as well.



Having said all that, you might want to consider a new computer all together. For example, you can get a low end Dell Dimension desktop for about $375 and it will have alot more bells and whistles than your current machine. Similarly, a lowend laptop for $499.



If you stick with your current machine and upgrade to XP, just make sure you have Norton AntiVirus installed and have Windows Firewall turned on. You should also make sure you have XP Service Pack 2 installed by grabbing all of the windows updates. That should be all you need. Also, if your computer is connected to a router, you have an additional layer of protection.
2007-06-22 08:59:29 UTC
Hello,



(ANS) The best option is to install a software firewall or also called a personal firewall. There are many which you can download for free (but you will need to make sure before you install any such software that they are ME compatible).



I'd would suggest Zone Labs excellent free basic firewall which is still available from http://www.zonelabs.com (look for free basic firewall).



**Try the current version which I think is now up to version 7, but if thats no good or isn't ME compatible contact me via my website http://www.cyteck.co.uk and I can supply you with version 2.361 which I'm sure is suitable for ME.



Hope that of use?



Kind Regards Ivan
2016-12-13 15:11:08 UTC
Avast and kaspersky -the two are sturdy. yet i choose avast over kaspersky. Avast comes with remarkable advantageous aspects like :internet advert blocker,risk-free browser for internet economic enterprise transactions and it has a correct virus detection fee.
2007-06-22 09:51:32 UTC
As XP was introduced October 2001, this makes your laptop 6-7 years old, ancient for a laptop. I recommend you buy a new one.



You don't mention your computer make, model, processor speed and RAM. If it is fast enough and I doubt it, consider updating to Windows XP.

==========================

Free Protection for Win 2000 (Win ME)



You must have full time (active) virus protection and full time spyware protection and a firewall



All the following programs are free.

---------------------------------------------

Firewall

Comodo Firewall Pro 2.4.16.174

http://www.download.com/Comodo-Firewall-Pro/3000-10435_4-10633448.html?tag=lst-3-8



ZoneAlarm

http://www.download.com/ZoneAlarm/3000-10435_4-10653297.html?tag=lst-3-3



AOL Firewall

http://daol.aol.com/safetycenter/firewall



--------------------------------------------------------------



Full Time (Active) Virus Protection

If you do not have active virus protection, install only one. All are excellent.

Try AVG first.



AVG Antivirus 7.5 Free Edition

http://free.grisoft.com/freeweb.php/doc/avg-anti-virus-free/lng/us/tpl/v5

http://www.download.com/AVG-Anti-Virus-Free-Edition/3000-2239_4-10669237.html?tag=lst-0-1

or

Free antivirus - avast! 4 Home Edition

http://www.avast.com/eng/avast_4_home.html

or

AOL Active Virus Shield (powered by Kaspersky)

http://www.activevirusshield.com/antivirus/freeav/index.adp

http://daol.aol.com/safetycenter/

---------------------------------------------------------

Full Time (Active) Spyware Protection



AOL Automatic Protection Against Spyware and Malware

http://daol.aol.com/safetycenter/spyware

http://daol.aol.com/safetycenter/

---------------------------------------------------------

Install the following five programs and run weekly or at least monthly. You need all five. They will greatly increase your protection. They are not a substitute for full time spyware and virus protection.





Spybot Search & Destroy (update + immunize + scan)

Do not enable Tea Timer and SDHelper

After installation: update + scan + immunize

http://www.safer-networking.org/en/mirrors/index.html

http://www.download.com/Spybot-Search-Destroy/3000-8022_4-10401314.html?tag=lst-0-1



SpywareBlaster: Update then open and click “enable all protection”.

http://www.javacoolsoftware.com/spywareblaster.html

http://www.download.com/SpywareBlaster/3000-8022_4-10486084.html?tag=lst-0-1



SUPERAntiSpyware free version: (update + scan)

http://www.superantispyware.com/

http://www.download.com/SUPERAntiSpyware-Free-Edition/3000-8022_4-10692691.html?tag=lst-0-1



CCleaner: Do not install toolbar option

Removes tracking cookies, unneeded files, history

In options.

Set to run when computer starts.

Place cookies you want to keep in save list

http://www.ccleaner.com/

http://www.download.com/CCleaner/3000-2144_4-10669303.html?tag=lst-0-1

---------------------------------------------

McAfee Site Advisor: Internet Explorer and Firefox

http://www.siteadvisor.com/

http://www.download.com/McAfee-SiteAdvisor-for-Internet-Explorer/3000-2144_4-10663376.html

http://www.download.com/McAfee-SiteAdvisor-for-Firefox/3000-11745_4-10663377.html

Indicates if a site is unsafe and can link to a page to explain why it is unsafe.
2007-06-22 08:56:15 UTC
most virus are spread through IE. IE is not a safe browser. you should use a more secure browser to protect your PC from virus.



i recommand you to use firefox with Google toolbar. firefox can block any any popup and disable any virus and adware, spyware on webpage, so, firefox is much safer than IE browser. as you know, most of virus spread throught internet and webpage.



besides, firefox is much smaller than IE, so it run faster than IE.



download firefox for free, Just have a try:



http://www.securebrowser.info/firefox/



Good Luck !!!
2007-06-22 08:51:58 UTC
Avg antivirus,

http://www.free.grisoft.com/doc/1
2007-06-22 08:52:15 UTC
if it doesnt work then you cant posibly install it.

get another version thats compatible with millenium .
2007-06-22 08:57:20 UTC
try spybot search and destroy, this is a free download, unless you want to donate to them, but you can update it regularly to find new viruses and immunise your computer against them, (also free),
2007-06-22 16:17:31 UTC
Quote "most virus are spread through IE. IE is not a safe browser. you should use a more secure browser to protect your PC from virus.



i recommand you to use firefox with Google toolbar. firefox can block any any popup and disable any virus and adware, spyware on webpage, so, firefox is much safer than IE browser. as you know, most of virus spread throught internet and webpage.



besides, firefox is much smaller than IE, so it run faster than IE."



Are you crazy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



I personally prefer Firefox, and use it all the time but if you seriously believe that keep on reading...



A newly uncovered vulnerability in most browsers can allow hackers to spoof the URL displayed in the address bar and the SSL certificate, a security firm warned Monday. The one exception? Microsoft's Internet Explorer.



Danish security company Secunia posted an alert describing the vulnerability--which affects Mozilla, Firefox, Safari, Opera, and Konqueror--as a "moderately critical" problem.



The vulnerability impacts every browser that uses the open-source Gecko browser kernel--nearly all except IE--because of a flaw in handling International Domain Names (IDN). Hackers can register domain names with certain international characters that resemble other commonly used characters, said Secunia, to spoof the address and trick the user into thinking they're at a legitimate site and/or it's secured by SSL.



Such spoofing vulnerabilities are typically exploited by phishers who try to dupe users into divulging financial information at bogus Web sites that resemble real-life banking, credit card, or retail sites.



The vulnerability has been confirmed in the latest version of Firefox, v. 1.0, as well as in Mozilla 1.7.5, Opera 7.54u1, Opera 7.54u2, Safari 1.2.4, Konqueror 3.2.2, and Netscape 7.2. Other editions of these browsers, however, may also be at risk, said Secunia, which posted an online test on its Web site.



Currently, none of the vendors have provided fixes for the flaw.



Hot on the heels of Monday's disclosure of spoofing vulnerabilities in most non-Internet Explorer browsers, a security researcher Tuesday unveiled another trio of bugs in Firefox and its Mozilla cousin.



The flaws, all of which involve some user action, can be used by hackers to drop code onto a PC, muck with the about:config element of the browser, or steal cookies that, for instance, provide instant access to protected Web sites.



"If you create a hybrid of a .gif image and a batch file you can trick Firefox," claimed the German researcher identified only as "mikx" by Danish security firm Secunia, in his original warning of one of the bugs.



"Since the hybrid renders as a valid image, Firefox tries to copy the image to the desktop when dropped. By creating the image dynamically and forcing the content type image/gif, the file can be of any extension (e.g. image.bat or image.exe). Since Windows hides known file extensions by default, a user can only tell that something went wrong by looking at the file icon, which is different of course. If the user does not care or know what this different icon means, a double click to view or edit the "image" he just dropped executes the batch file instead."



The vulnerabilities have been confirmed in Firefox 1.0 and Mozilla 1.7.5, the most current editions of the open-source browser and browser suite, respectively.



While Mozilla Foundation developers have implemented fixes, they haven't been rolled into a patch or a new version that can be downloaded and used without recompiling the code.



Not for Profit



Myth - "Firefox and Mozilla are Not for Profit" - Example



Reality - "The Mozilla Corporation pays its employees from the revenues we receive from our product. We are very fortunate in that the search feature in Firefox is both appreciated by our users and generates revenue in the tens of millions of dollars."



"Now, the Mozilla Foundation, the non-profit entity that develops and distributes Firefox, is forming a for-profit subsidiary that will eventually capitalize on the browser's popularity. The Mozilla Foundation will announce today that it has formed a wholly-owned subsidiary, Mozilla Corp."



"Unlike the non-profit Mozilla Foundation, the Mozilla Corporation will be a taxable entity (that is, a for-profit rather than a non-profit)"



Myth - "Firefox has lower System Requirements than Internet Explorer"



Reality - Internet Explorer 6 has much lower minimum System Requirements than Firefox 2



Recommended to run IE:



486/66 MHz CPU

16 MB of RAM

11.5 MB of free disk space

Windows 98



Minimum to run Firefox:



233 MHz CPU

64 MB of RAM

50 MB of free disk space

Windows 98



Another Myth is than Mozilla is the fastest browser.



WRONG! Opera is the fastest. Go to http://www.howtocreate.co.uk/browserSpeed.html#winspeed

for more details.



Faster than Mozilla



Myth - "Firefox is Faster than Mozilla"



Reality - Ironically Mozilla 1.8 is faster than Firefox 2.x in 5 out of 7 measures of performance.. - Source



Notes - Considering Firefox is supposed to be the lighter, leaner version of the Mozilla suite, this is very surprising.



This is from Mozilla Themselves:



Downloads



Myth - "Firefox Achieved 150 million downloads in January of 2006"



Reality - "Oops. We recently introduced a bug into the counter and it's being fixed. We're not quite there yet. Sorry for the confusion. We accidentally counted the 20 million people who updated from Firefox 1.5 to Firefox 1.5.0.1 this week.



Go to http://www.spreadfirefox.com/node/21923 for the source.



Firefox is anything but Secure with multiple unpatched vulnerabilities allowing exposure of sensitive data to local users. You only need one vulnerability to be insecure. Since Firefox v1.x was released, users have been exposed to over 150 security vulnerabilities and countin



Firefox is the Most Secure Web Browser"



Reality - Opera is currently the most Secure Graphical Web Browser in Windows.



Myth - "Firefox Vulnerabilities are Quickly Patched"



Reality - Multiple vulnerabilities have remained unpatched for a long time. - Source



SA12403 - Unpatched since 08-30-2004

SA12580 - Unpatched since 09-18-2004



OS Integration Security



Myth - "Firefox is More Secure because it is not integrated into the OS"



Reality - "The issue of not being part of the Operating System is an interesting one though that is frequently the subject of misunderstanding. IE is part of the Windows Operating System so that parts of the OS and other applications can rely on the functionality and APIs being present. IE in turn relies on Operating System functionality to do it's job. To be clear there are no Operating System APIs that IE uses that are not documented on MSDN as part of the platform SDK and available to other browsers and any other software that runs on Windows. The security of any browser is irrelevant to if it is part of the operating system. If we are to debate security of browsers then let's bring in relevant arguments and accurate details about different possible attacks rather than rely on the irrational fear that because IE is part of the operating system it must be exposing OS functionality to the web. This is not the case as any software has access to the same set of OS APIs and can therefore expose the same set of OS functionality as IE."





Myth - "Firefox is More Secure because it does not use ActiveX"



Solution to Spyware



Myth - "Firefox is a Solution to Spyware"



Reality - This is very misleading and can lull users into a false sense of security. Use the free Secure XP Guide to properly secure your system and get a REAL solution to Spyware. Firefox is nothing more than a Web Browser. Installing Firefox does not clean your system of existing Spyware infections or protect you from manually installing anything in the future, including Spyware. These can come from Downloads, Email Attachments, File Sharing and by other means. You can still easily get infected with Spyware using Firefox as these exploits demonstrate:



"Earlier this week, I blogged about a site doing a bunch of different exploits, depending on what you are running. One of the things the site will do is detect if you have Firefox, and attempt to exploit it, using the InstallVersion.compareTo() vulnerability. There are actually a number of sites running this exploit, and one of our researchers, Adam Thomas, was kind enough to take some pictures. Going to a site with an older version of Firefox got him just a bucket-load of Spyware." - Source



"Visit the same page in FF and, with the JRE up and running, the below happens. Being a curious soul, I agreed to the install - and quickly wished I hadn't! In a flurry of remote downloads, numerous changes to the registry took place and a sizeable amount of IE specific installs began downloading. Amongst the assortment was DyFuCA, Internet Optimizer, ISTsvc, Kapabout, sais (180 Solutions), SideFind, Avenue Media and something called djtopr1150.exe lurking in the Temp folder."



Reality - "ActiveX gets a bad rap as the cause of all of Internet Explorer's security woes. But it's just not so. Old myths die hard! There's no doubt that Internet Explorer has more than it's fair share of security holes, but very few of them have to do with ActiveX. ActiveX controls are packages of code that can run in the context of the browser. They are installable through a link on a Web page. Exactly how different is this from having a link to an executable file that you have to explicitly run? Essentially not at all, except that the ActiveX version is more convenient. Even with Firefox you can download and run an executable file. Does this make Firefox unsafe? In fact, Mozilla and Firefox's support for XPCOM, a plain text and platform-independent software model, is very comparable to ActiveX once you get the user to click "Yes." The complaint against ActiveX has always centered around the ability to install native code from across the Internet, but this is less unusual than it seems, and ActiveX arguably makes things more secure. When you encounter an object tag referencing a control that you do not have installed, you then have the opportunity to install it. Under the default security settings, you will be warned before this happens and given an opportunity to approve or reject the installation."



Anti-Phishing



Myth - "Firefox 2's Phishing Protection is better than Internet Explorer 7"



Reality - "Internet Explorer 7's Phishing Filter finished at the top of 3Sharp's list as most accurate anti-phishing technology, catching nearly 9 out of 10 phishing sites while generating no warning or block errors on the 500 legitimate websites tested."



Integrated Search



Myth - "Firefox was the first Web Browser to include an Integrated Search feature"



Reality - Opera was the first browser to include an Integrated Search feature in Opera 5 in 2000.



Pop-up Blocking



Myth - "Firefox was the first Web Browser to include Pop-up Blocking"



Reality - Opera was the first browser to include Pop-up Blocking in Opera 5 in 2000.



Blocks All Pop-ups



Myth - "Firefox Blocks all Pop-ups"



Reality - Firefox does not Block all Pop-ups. PopupTest shows the "Drop down Popup" and the "Sticky Popup" are not blocked. Other types of Pop-ups continue to get through.



Also if you want to see something just plain stupid type about:mozilla into the Firefox address bar to get "The Book of Mozilla". FIREFOX IS NOT A RELIGION.



Now. Even though I am currently using Firefox to post this blog, I'm an just tired of people bad mouthing IE.



I rest my case.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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