Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
Spyware:
What It Is and How to Combat It |
by:
Dean
Phillips |
Spyware
is software or hardware installed on a computer
without the user's knowledge which gathers
information about
that user for later retrieval by whomever
controls the
spyware.
Spyware can be broken down into two different
categories,
surveillance spyware and advertising spyware.
Surveillance software includes key loggers,
screen capture
devices, and trojans. These would be used
by corporations,
private detectives, law enforcement, intelligence
agencies,
suspicious spouses, etc.
Advertising spyware is software that is
installed alongside
other software or via activex controls on
the internet,
often without the user's knowledge, or without
full
disclosure that it will be used for gathering
personal
information and/or showing the user ads.
Advertising
spyware logs information about the user,
possibly including
passwords, email addresses, web browsing
history, online
buying habits, the computer's hardware and
software
configuration, the name, age, sex, etc of
the user.
As with spam, advertising spyware uses the
CPU, RAM, and
resources of the user's computer, making
the user pay for
the costs associated with operating it.
It then makes use of
the user's bandwidth to connect to the internet
and upload
whatever personal information it has gathered,
and to
download advertisements which it will present
to the user,
either by way of pop up windows, or with
the ad banners of
ad-supported software. All of this can be
considered theft
in the cases of advertising spyware that
installs without
disclosure.
And while anti-virus software like Symantec's
Norton Anti-
Virus or McAfee's ViruScan can offer some
protection, one of
the best ways to combat spyware is with
anti-spy software.
Two of the best are Lavasoft's Ad-aware
and Spybot's Search
& Destroy, which are available as free downloads.
http://www.lavasoft.de/
http://www.safer-networking.org/en/index.html
The free version of Ad-aware does not proactively
protect
against spyware infestation. You have to
start the Ad-aware
application and initiate a scan to detect
spyware. But the
paid version, Ad-aware Plus does remain
alert in the
background, like Spybot, to deflect any
attempts at
infestation. In recent tests, Ad-aware Plus
and Spybot both
protected systems extremely well.
If you haven't already done so, I highly
recommend
installing Microsoft's Service Pack 2. SP2
tightens your
PC's security with a new Windows Firewall,
an improved
Automatic Updates feature, and a pop-up
ad blocker for
Internet Explorer. Plus, the newly minted
Security Center
gives you one easy-to-use interface for
keeping tabs on your
PC's security apps.
There are also other steps you can take
to protect against
spyware. One simple step is to switch from
Microsoft's
browsers, which have security holes for
spyware programs to
exploit. A good alternative is Mozilla Firefox.
Another not-
so-simple step is switching to the Mac or
Linux operating
systems, which don't have spyware problems.
About the author:
Dean Phillips is an Internet marketing expert,
writer,
publisher and entrepreneur. Questions? Comments?
Dean can be
reached at mailto: dean@lets-make-money.net
Visit his website at: http://www.lets-make-money.net
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|