| | Virus & Worm Prevention & Repair
Contact Monsters Studios right away if you feel you have a worm or virus. It is important that you turn off your computer as soon as possible. Please do not attempt to repair yourself. The potential damage you may do will most certainly double any repair cost you may have.
It's 2005: Computer viruses, worms, Trojan horses, and
spyware applications are flooding the world's networks. You're nuts to use a PC
without an antivirus tool, but that alone isn't enough. Antivirus programs can't
detect a new virus until it is already on the loose. That leaves your system
vulnerable for the hours or even days it takes your antivirus vendor to deliver
an update. Fortunately, you can help stop the nastiest viruses in their
tracks--even before anyone knows about them.
Patch that system, private! It's time
to bust out the old drill-sergeant voice, because anyone who doesn't follow this
simple instruction is going to have to drop and give me 50 knuckle push-ups.
Okay, everyone repeat after me, "Unpatched systems are the devil's
spawn."
Enable Automatic Updates: In Windows
XP, right-click My Computer, choose Properties, Automatic Updates,
and make sure that 'Keep my computer up to date' is checked. (See this month's Internet
Tips
for more on Automatic Updates.) Once a month (preferably just after Microsoft
announces its latest security fixes), visit windowsupdate.microsoft.com,
let the site scan your system, and then download anything labeled 'Critical'.
Every month, no exceptions--got it?
Turn off scripting behaviors in Internet
Explorer: Many worms and viruses spread through Web page scripts
(commands in the page that push the worm out to anyone who opens it in IE).
Other browsers don't have this problem, but if you can't or simply won't change
to Opera, Mozilla, or another browser, you must alter IE's scripting settings to
block the threat.
In IE, click Tools, Internet Options, Security.
Choose the Earth icon under 'Select a Web content zone', and click Custom
Level. The settings in the dialog have three options: Disable, Enable, and
Prompt. Enabling everything is asking for trouble, but being prompted every time
a script or ActiveX control wants to run will drive you batty. In any event,
disable 'Download unsigned ActiveX controls', 'Initialize and script ActiveX
controls not marked as safe', 'Active scripting', and 'Scripting of Java
applets'. Set 'Java permissions' to High Safety.
With scripts disabled, many of your favorite Web sites
may not open. Also, your company intranet or Web mail service may require
scripting. If so, add the URLs for these sites and services to IE's Trusted
Sites list. Open IE and click Tools, Internet Options, Security. Select
the Trusted Sites icon, click Sites, and then enter the URLs one
at a time. Uncheck Require server verification (https:) for all sites in this
zone, and click OK.
Control what starts up with Windows: Many
worms place a reference to themselves in a portion of the Windows Registry that
defines what programs start up with Windows. The TeaTimer applet that comes
bundled with Spybot
Search & Destroy 1.3 and with WinPatrol
can control what gets added to this list. TeaTimer asks you to verify any
program that seeks to be added to that list. Spybot and WinPatrol are free, so
why not use both?
Use a software and a hardware firewall: If
you have broadband Internet service--even if you have Zone Labs' free ZoneAlarm
or some other software firewall active on your PC--you can't be too safe. Belkin,
D-Link, Linksys, and other vendors sell inexpensive broadband gateways that
bounce back worm attacks that otherwise would reach your computer.
Security Tips: Keep Viruses,
Worms, and Spyware Off Your PC
Proactive Malware Prevention With Qwik-Fix
In early tests, PivX's Qwik-Fix
Pro
was successful in preventing malicious scripted Web
pages from forcing Internet Explorer to load worms or
spyware. The tool provides stopgap protection so that
your system doesn't get infected while you're trying to
download patches. Qwik-Fix Pro is free for noncommercial
use, and businesses should be able to buy the corporate
version by the time you read this.
Posted Sunday, February 28, 2010 |