Saturday, December 26, 2009

Battleplan: PC Invasion

Or, How all that Nastyware Invades Your Computer

Here 'tis –the shocking truth! Explained in a few simple steps:

In almost ALL cases –YOU are responsible!

  • You, knowingly or unknowingly, installed something you shouldn't have from an untrustworthy source. This can include screensavers, toolbars or torrents (downloaded music, video, etc). You failed to check the format (that little extension after the period or dot in the name of the item) before you downloaded. Or you also failed to scan for viruses after it was downloaded and before you opened and/or ran it on your machine. Note: the second you click the executable file, Pandora is out of the box and the trouble starts. Sometimes you may not notice it immediately, it may have a delayed action, but sooner or later, you will notice that things are not as they ought to be.
  • You failed to proceed cautiously when installing an otherwise very likely reputable application that bundles optional rubbish-ware along with the programme or application you want to install. (See 5 below for more on this one.)
  • As in 1 above it can be software you installed sometime in the past and has either already been infecting your machine, or it starts its malicious action after the lapse of a certain amount of time. Further, it may arrive with other programmes that install themselves alongside an existing piece of software and, like a time bomb, explodes its previously hidden payload of malware without notice.
  • You are not running an effective and legitimate Anti-Virus or Anti-Spyware application and, you are not taking time to allow it to run periodic full and in-depth scans of your machine to allow it to do its full job of detection and prevention. Sadly, there are more fake and extremely malicious anti spy and antivirus ware programmes out there trying to con you into giving them access to your machine than you can shake the proverbial stick at! Typically they promise the world as far as their ability to clean and protect your machine, but always along with multiple and dire warnings of how badly your machine is infected. Then, when you respond by clicking what appears to be the, 'button of deliverance', your troubles increase until any activity on your machine is pretty much impossible. Removing them can be a challenge even to experienced technicians, and can necessitate a full reinstall of the Operating System and all your other important applications.
  • Otherwise Legitimate and Useful Software Manufactures 'Sell Out' to the Bad Guys: It seems hardly credible, but those who make good and useful software can be enticed into including these optional and often quite unwanted apps and making them difficult to notice and thereby easy to install along with their own. There is, of course, some sort of incentive. Remember, the price of liberty (freedom from infestation) is constant vigilance!
  • Pop Ups etc: These are particularly effective at trapping PC users. You slavishly and obediently, like a sheep to the slaughter, clicked on the one of the many enticing and attractive pop-ups that followed a previous infection and exacerbated an already compromised position.

The Good News is, you have read this article and you are now armed with knowledge. You are forewarned and forearmed. You, from now on, will view with great skepticism:

  1. The steps you are led through as you seek to download that enticing piece of software, music, move, file etc from the web. You will ponder the file and seek to find out a little bit more about its bona fides, its format, its origin and more.
  2. The process of installing downloaded programmes and applications from the web. You will not simply click, 'OK', 'Next', 'Yes' etc without reading what you are saying 'Yes' and 'OK' to!
  3. You will NOT click on Pop-ups at all, ever again, unless you know exactly what they are, what they will do, and where they may lead you. You will disable pop-ups so that your browser must ask you before allowing them to appear and distract you from what you are doing.
  4. You will resolve to be less impulsive in your web activities and more reflective on where you point your browser and what sites you visit and say to yourself, "Do I really want some destructive nutter to have access to my expensive and so very useful computer that is so much fun in so many ways?" Do I want to have to pay my friendly computer tech all that money to fix what my own momentary lapse in concentration caused? (The answer to this is, of course, 'Yes', I do. I am only too glad to contribute to their retirement fund!' That being the case please ignore all you've just read and carry on regardless. My contact details are on my web site: www.jbc.gen.nz/pccare. Thank you very much.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please feel free to post comments related to the subject or topic in the main post. Do not use foul or bad language or swearing, suggestive of obnoxious language. All posts failing to observe this rule will be instantly deleted. Otherwise, please agree, disagree, debate, argue, express your opinions as freely as you wish. Thank you.