My daily work routine has me maintaining and supporting about 60 workstations and a dozen servers. Due to the nature of the industry, I have to keep the computers and the network almost completely wide open and unrestricted.
In almost six years, we’ve had almost no spyware outbreaks.
The reason is simple: user education. I’ve spent more time trying to educate our employees about what not to do when they are on their own as opposed to trying to find technological barriers that providers overcome at every turn. So far, its worked.
If you are looking for ways to arm yourself in your own personal war against malelovent downloads to your computer, here are my following reccomendations:
If you think about what you do when you are online and don’t click shiny things that are trying to lure you into the depths of the Internet, you should be find yourself a lot less prone to the nasties.
I’ve been addicted to the Internet since before Windows 95. I can’t tell you how often I have sat down and said “today is the day I finish my website”. I can tell you thatI’ve actually gotten pretty close…twice?
The first time, I had managed to use Netobjects Fusion to get a site going on vilsack.virtualave.net. I managed to write a little bit, and had something that, at the time, was considerably more respectable than the assault on your senses that was located mostly at Geocities. Hell, it even had pixel perfect positioning!
Then, about four years ago, I managed to have something even better. It was a site based on a small CMS I was trying to code for myself. It had pictures, my resume, and even a hand-coded journal. I eventually ditched it when I joined the MODx team, but nevertheless…it was ALMOST a real website!
Now, I am getting really close to finalizing this design for a new and exciting page. In fact, this very text will be serving as a more coherent “Lorem Ipsum” so I take more ownership of my creation.
I realize this is all incredibly boring, but for me, this is a big step for me.