Sunday, June 27, 2004

The good old days

What a mess we’re in now. I never thought I would pine for the good old days in computing, where me and my buddies Jim and Mark would take turns typing in the peeks and pokes in endless listings from “RUN” magazine to make my Commodore 64 actually do something.

I didn’t have to worry about viruses, Trojans, spyware or spam. Instead, I was focused on actually getting my cassette tape drive (what we had before disk drives) actually could load a program in less than 30 minutes.

Now we have this stupid Sasser worm and others like it that reboot your computer every 60 seconds, with no other intention other that to steal your passwords and drive you nuts. I get lots of mails now about how to get rid of these things and I keep having to say the same things over and over; install an anti-virus product (RIGHT NOW) and update it at least once a week. If you don’t update it, your PC will be wide open to the next vulnerability. You can get McAfee for $25 at Sam’s Club and Norton for $35. Pick one and do it.

Secondly, download AdAware (it’s free at www.lavasoft.de) and keep it updated too. Update it and run it once a week and delete everything it finds. (There is a “check for updates” link near the lower right of the main screen.)

The detailed instructions on how to get rid of Sasser or other infections, head to Symantec’s web site (www.symantec.com) and click on Virus Removal Tools.

Without protection, you’re a sitting duck.

Just last week, the “Scob” outbreak unleashed one of the more clever attacks. To be infected by this one, all you have to do is visit an infected Web site, of which there are thousands. The Trojan Horse places a keystroke logger on users' PCs and is designed to capture credit card numbers and passwords and send them back to a server in Russia.

Microsoft is scrambling to create a patch to block the attack but this illustrates the cat and mouse aspect of this problem. Eventually Microsoft will include anti-virus protection in Windows but until then we’re still going to have to visit a number of different places to update our operating systems, our virus software and our ad-blocking software (not to mention spam blockers and application software patches.

I should also remind Windows users to visit Windows Update (hit START and it should be in your upper list or head to Windowsupdate dot Microsoft dot com and let it scan your PC). Install everything (yes, everything) in the “Critical updates” section. This is another thing you should check every week or so. (That weekly list is getting long, isn’t it?

Well, add to that any patches for your software firewall (if you have one). If you use a hardware router for your firewall, it rarely needs updating but I would check for a “firmware” update every six months or so.

WEEKLY WEB WONDER: Some of the best free entertainment on the Web is the daily White House press briefing. Head to www.whitehouse.gov and click on “Press Briefings” on the left.

James Derk is computer columnist for Scripps Howard News Service. His e-mail address is jderk@yahoo.com

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