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Hello everyone,
There's quite a bit of confusion going around about viruses these days - real ones vs fake ones
(hoaxes). I'm hoping to educate those of you who may be confused on the
differences between the two. My goal is by the year 2025 to never get an email
warning me of a virus hoax. To date, in my 10 years in computing, I've only
received 2 valid warning from friends/clients. The other 500+ warning were all
fakes. I'm sure you all get these emails as well (including the one where Bill
Gates will give you $1,000,000 if you forward this email). If you get as many
of these as I do, I highly recommend that you forward this email to all your
friends, relatives and colleagues so that maybe we can cut down on the amount
of panic that is spread warming people of dangers that do not exist.
If you're getting this virus alert and are not subscribed to my FREE
newsletter, please do so today. It could save your computer's data in the
future!! To subscriber, just send blank email to mailto:thisandthatcomputertips-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Real
Virus Threat - Bugbear
There is a new
REAL virus threat hitting many of you - as evidenced by me receiving the virus
1x/day from a random sampling of my readers. This is not a hoax and can easily
bring down your system, erasing all of your data and infecting all your
friend's and colleagues's computers.
It's called W32.Bugbear
It's one of the nastiest,
most sophisticated viruses to date. It has been spreading quite rapidly and is
infecting machines of everyone I know. If it goes into your computer
undetected, it will send itself to everyone in your address book. It will try
to disable any anti-virus and firewall software you have.
Read the details of the virus here:
Click Here
If you got the virus, go here, print the pages, download the removal tool and
run it:
Click Here
Fake
Virus Threat -
A Hoax - Not Real - Nothing to Worry about - Don't forward warnings - jdbmgr.exe - asking to delete this file
http://www.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/jdbgmgr.exe.file.hoax.html
This is what's know as a hoax. It tell you to delete a valid file, jdbmgr.exe
or Java Debugger Manager, because it will cause destruction in 14 days,
etc... These hoax alerts look very real and you will be (and are) compelled to
send them to everyone you know. I have one request when you get one. Take a
deep breath. Then go to www.google.com . Type in the virus name and see what
comes up in the search engine. I can guarantee you, 99 times out of 100, what
someone sent you is a fake virus alert.
Standard policies you should
follow, all the time, to keep your data secure, avoid getting viruses and
protecting your data should you get a virus:
1. Open attachments/downloads with caution.
Attachments are a fact of
life and you will need to open them. If you're not expecting an attachment from
someone you know, call them or email them before opening one. The rule "I
only open attachments from people I know" does not and never did apply.
Most like the only people you will get viruses from are people you know.
2. Make sure you always have the latest anti-virus software.
Each year, Norton, Mcafee, Panda, Trend and probably a dozen others upgrade
their version. I usually wait about 3 months before upgrading, but I do upgrade
every year.
3. Have your anti-virus software set to automatically update your software.
The best software I've seen for this is Norton made by Symantec. As
I'm on the paranoid side, I still manually update 1-2 times/week. You may want
to do the same. Always do a manual update after you hear of a major virus
outbreak.
4. If you have AOL, be more then careful, as no anti-virus scanning tool
I know of will scan either incoming or outgoing mail with AOL as email
provider.
5. Backup, backup, backup.
Backup up daily and thoroughly. In case of a virus attack, you'll have a
good solid virus-free backup. Use an on-line backup service, an external hard
drive, CDs or even floppies. Just make sure you get data off the machine on a
regular basis.
6. Install a firewall on your system.
At a minimum, you want Norton Internet Security 2002 or Zone Alarm Pro 3.0.
Even better, install a hardware firewall as well. This will block people from
trying to get in your computer and blocks evil programs, like the bugbear
virus, from sending data out.
To read my past newsletters on virus hoaxes, go to these pages:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/thisandthatcomputertips/message/30
(first reported jdbmgr.exe on May 7, 2002)
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/thisandthatcomputertips/message/17
(talked about SULFNBK.exe on Dec 21, 2001)
************************
Hope you enjoyed the ride....
Clyde Lerner, In The Moment Computing
Phone: 408.732.8500
E-mail comments/feedback to: http://www.itmcomputing.com/contact_computer.php
This newsletter is a service of In The Moment Computing and is Copyright 2005 Clyde Lerner. All worldwide rights reserved. If forwarding, please forward all of e-mail, not any portion therein. To see past issues of This and That Computer Tips newsletter, please visit the web at: http://www.itmcomputing.com/newsletter.php and click on "Archives."
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