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"A Look Inside - Protecting Your Family Online"
By Jim Loznak , Vice President of Engineering & Operations
Your EagleNet Internet connection is your family's link to the wide assortment of information available on the Internet. It's there to help you connect with extended family during the holiday season. It's there to help with school projects, to give you news and help you learn more about your hobbies.
But often, this same connection can expose your family to spammers, pornographers, viruses and other unsavory characters. The Internet is the ultimate in free expression and inappropriate content is sometimes the price we pay for this freedom.
Luckily, EagleNet has several new tools that can greatly minimize these problems in your home. These tools, combined with some common sense measures you and your family can adopt, will help make your Internet experience safe and more enjoyable. Here are a few tips you should consider:
Be careful giving out your EagleNet email address to companies; if you wish to give an address, you can create another email address with EagleNet in which to use for this purpose. This will prevent companies from selling your every day EagleNet address to spammers.
Communicate. Talk to your child about potential dangers online. Keep the computer in a common room of the house. Teach your child responsible ways to use Internet resources.
Utilize content filtering software, parental controls and/or pop-up blockers.
See below for more information about how EagleNet can help you protect your family online with iGuard parental controls and block pop-up ads with EagleNet's new Pop-Up StopperŪ, by Panicware.
Make a contract with your child stating the online rules and have your child sign it and post it by the computer. If you suspect someone is acting inappropriately toward your child, call the Michigan State Police Cyber-Tip Hotline 1-877-5CYBER3.
The Internet is a great resource for the entire family. A little prevention can go a long way toward keeping it a safe medium for everyone in your home.
Top 10 Viruses And Hoaxes
For November 2003, the chart is as follows, with the most frequently occurring virus at number one:
| 1. | W32/Sober-A | 32.6% |
| 2= | W32/Mimail-C | 9.5% |
| 2= | W32/Mimail-F | 9.5% |
| 4. | W32/Dumaru-A | 8.0% |
| 5. | W32/Mimail-F | 5.1% |
| 6. | W32/Gibe-F | 4.5% |
| 7. | W32/Nachi-A | 2.6% |
| 8. | W32/Mimail-J | 2.4% |
| 9. | W32/Klez-H | 2.2% |
| 10. | W32/Mimail-E | 1.5% |
| Others | 22.1% |
"Although Mimail made five appearances in this month's chart - totaling over a quarter of all reports -- it is the bilingual Sober worm that has caused the most problems for computer users this month," said Chris Belthoff, senior security analyst at Lynnfield, MA - based, Sophos, Inc. "Sober-A cunningly disguises itself using a multitude of subject titles and messages, making it difficult to spot. It can even present itself in German if it thinks it is being examined on a German user's computer."
"The Mimail worms attempted a number of different tricks, including attempting to steal the credit card information from Paypal users," continued Belthoff. " Virus writers and hackers are becoming more determined to steal confidential information, which could leave a deep hole in a victim's pocket."
The top ten hoaxes reported to Sophos during November are as follows:
| 1. | Hotmail Hoax | 31.3% |
| 2. | Meninas da Playboy | 12.7% |
| 3. | Bonsai kitten | 6.2% |
| 4. | Budweiser frogs screensaver | 4.7% |
| 5. | JDBGMGR | 4.0% |
| 6. | A virtual card for you | 3.8% |
| 7. | Bill Gates Fortune | 3.0% |
| 8. | Frog in a blender/Fish in a bowl | 2.9% |
| 9. | WTC Survivor | 2.3% |
| 10. | Do not push 90# | 1.8% |
| Others | 27.3% |
"A new version of the Hotmail hoax, promising users extra storage space if they forwarded an email to their friends, helped keep the hoax at the top of the list of hottest hoaxes," said Belthoff.
"Creeping into the chart is the 'Do not push 90#' chain letter, which is based on an actual telephone scam from the early 1990s, and has caused people to be unnecessarily alarmed. If you receive a virus hoax, chain letter or email scam, you should delete it immediately and resist any temptation to forward it on," continued Belthoff. "Forwarding chain letters via email not only annoy most recipients, they clog bandwidth."
(Source: Sophos)
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