Re: NFC Off Topic Computer Vs Network | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Larry (l02turner![]() |
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Date: Mon, 4 Jul 2011 10:06:29 -0700 (PDT) |
Thanks Adam – I don’t take my laptop out of the house although there are
other networks in the neighborhood that are both secure and insure – I have a
password on my Router so hopefully that helps? Since my laptop stays
home I hope hot spots are a non issue?I use Comcast which provides Norton with
the package – I ran the trial versions of Malware and Byte something. Both
ran but found nothing so I am hoping that means Norton is doing its job?
BTW, I allow MS and Norton to automatically update. I kept
reading that allowing MS to automatically update to keep their
security stuff to stay current. Same with Norton and their AV defs.
Thanks for the info – sounds like my assumptions were close – but as you
said about “standards” – there are standards then there are standards.
;-^
With my computers staying in the house and the router pass-worded I hope
I’m fairly safe. As far as my cell phone – I never read email with
it - I have a basic phone – no fancy keyboard – no texting, etc. If
I could have gotten one without the camera I would have....
BTW, I see stuff talking about “RF” signals being high-jacked from cell
phones – any truth to that? – is it very preve
lant? What info can be stolen if theft is possible?
Thanks Adam – I really appreciate this -
LarryT
From: Adam Green
Sent: Monday, July 04, 2011 11:52 AM
To: Larry ; The FerrariList
Subject: Re: [Ferrari] NFC Off Topic Computer Vs
Network You've
got the gist of it. Some would joke "there's so many standards, there's
always one that fits" but sadly there's so many standards, there's really no
standard. Here's what's in my head:
"network" is everything and nothing specific.
"WAN" is anything outside your computer or outside your office or outside
your home. This can be your ISP, or simply the Web or Internet or it can
mean:
"hotspot" (wifi service in a public or private venue where a password or
security may or may not exist ... be extremely cautious when using any
hotspot. Even if a hotspot requires a password, it can still be
insecure. Once someone has your email password, you're swinging in the
breeze -- they can look in your email provider files, your drafts, your sent
mail, your inbox, find other references to passwords, financial accounts,
etc. Just carrying a bloody cell phone with wifi into an open hotspot is
enough for anyone to get your email password. I'd say this is fast
becoming the most common way for people to get their email highjacked.
"LAN" is anything between your computers, inside your home or office, your
private network, inside your:
"firewall" is a router (simplest term for any number of configurations of
hardware) and software designed to keep unwelcome visitors outside, but won't
necessarily protect you from:
"malware" (malicious software trying to infect your computers with a virus,
steal your private information or simply damage or corrupt your files or
systems.
I mention all these because you must (must!) have all these bases covered,
or you're swinging in the breeze ... may as well start and run your freshly
rebuilt race engine without oil pressure -- the consequences are inevitable and
tragic.
When you'e setting up Windows 7, if you're changing security settings,
avoid letting anything have access to your LAN. Avoid leaving file sharing
or printer sharing available to anything -- at least restrict everything to the
LAN. The Windows 7 defaults are quite strict and will prevent or at least
warn you of any activity on your computer that could be unwelcome. Unless
you're following specific instructions to get something going (like a VPN or
trusted software like Skype or Google) then don't open up any of the access
restrictions, don't allow browser plug-ins, don't allow things to "start when
Windows starts" etc.
"ISP" is the Internet Service Provider, which is a paid service to provide a logical set up and physical connection from your computer or private ni When someone says "network" they probably also mean the network interface
in your given computer and they might well be generally talking about getting
your single computer or home network connected to the Web (aka Internet, aka
WWW, aka "it's a bunch of pipes!")
For any hardware or software since W7 or OS X, the configuration of the
network ("the setup of the NIC" aka "IP address" or any reference to
software or hardware configuration) is generally fully automatic, beyond you
knowing a password. They're probably talking about access beyond the LAN,
connecting your LAN to a WAN.
I run Mac OS X and Windows 7. I use AVG Free on the W7 boxes.
Keep your OS updated. Avoid using hotspots without security. Don't
leave your cell phone or laptop so that it will check for email as soon as it
finds a wifi service. Well, hopefully that scatter gun hit the
target.
Adam On Mon, Jul 4, 2011 at 8:17 AM, Larry <l02turner [at] comcast.net>
wrote:
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NFC Off Topic Computer Vs Network Larry, July 4 2011
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Re: NFC Off Topic Computer Vs Network Adam Green, July 4 2011
- Re: NFC Off Topic Computer Vs Network Larry, July 4 2011
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Re: NFC Off Topic Computer Vs Network Adam Green, July 4 2011
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