
The Iowa Stater
November 2000
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Beware the Trojan Horse
Theres more than just common viruses floating around on the
Internet these days. There also are "Trojan Horses," "buffer overflows"
and "denial of service" attacks that can bring a computer system to its
knees. However, there are steps you can take to make your computer more
robust in todays world of Internet interconnectivity, according to
electrical and computer engineering professors Jim Davis and Doug Jacobson.
- Use a secure password. Good passwords are not found in the English
dictionary, or a Spanish dictionary, or a computer geek dictionary for
that matter. People wanting to gain access to your computer can use crack
password-generating programs that work from dictionaries. A good password
is six to eight characters long, comprising letters and numbers and is
not a word in the dictionary. Nor should it be connected to information
others know about you, like your phone number.
- The value of backing up. Its as old as "an ounce of prevention
is worth a pound of cure." And just as often overlooked. Backing up all
important programs and data will save time and money, should your system
be attacked.
- Hold the Java and the cookies. Disable Java and JavaScript in your Web
browser unless you absolutely need it to access a Web site. Also, have your
computer warn you before accepting "cookies."
- Scanners and firewalls. Get a good virus scanner, which checks all the
files on a computer to see if there are viruses, and be careful what you
download and run on your computer. Personal firewall software will help to
protect you when surfing the Internet.
- Exercise common sense. Take time to read and understand the privacy
policies of any Web site to which you provide information. Many sites collect
and disseminate information. A reputable site will publish its privacy
policies.
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