McAfee Reports That Malware Is On The Rise | WebProNews
Malware threats are increasing across all platforms, including Mac and mobile devices, according to recent data from McAfee as presented by WebProNews. Full Story
How To Stop Website Tracking Cookies
Many of you may be familiar with a computer cookie, it’s a small piece of data sent from a visited website and stored by your computer’s web browser. Cookies act as a token that the website retrieves from your browser when revisiting the site in order to remember your preferences or session information. Things like your log-in session, items viewed or placed in your shopping cart on an online store, or pages visited while on a particular site can all be recalled with a cookie. Read more…
1 In 5 US Windows PCs Are Without Antivirus Protection
A survey of more than 280 million PCs over the last 12 months found that the US ranks in the top five most-unprotected countries. Please verify that you have antivirus software installed, updated and under a current subscription. Full Story
-Ted Eiler
Computer Service and Repair Technician
www.tecs-onsite.com
800.993.TECS (8327)
262.327.0858
414.375.0858
Facebook may allow children under 13 to join with parental consent
Amid numerous legal and parental concerns, Facebook is considering a move to allow children under 13 to join with some type of parental consent verification. Full story
-Ted Eiler
Computer Service and Repair Technician
www.tecs-onsite.com
800.993.TECS (8327)
262.327.0858
414.375.0858
[email protected]
Is The FBI Shutting Down My Internet This Summer?
A number of people have emailed me recently with concerns about losing their internet connection this summer when the FBI takes down clean DNS servers temporarily set up to assist the 4 million plus computer users worldwide impacted by malware called DNSChanger. DNS, which stands for Domain Name System, is a critical internet service that resolves host names such as www.google.com to a numerical IP address that computers use to locate a website. Under normal circumstances, your computer connects to your internet service provider’s DNS servers (or some other legitimate public DNS server). When infected with the DNSChanger malware however, your computer is configured to send its DNS queries to rogue DNS servers who can direct your browser to any website they wish. Affected users could be directed to fake versions of legitimate websites, advertisement websites promoting products, or malware sites that will further infect their computer, just to name a few. Read more…