On or around Wed, 23 Aug 2006 23:05:36 +0100, "William Tasso"
<
[email protected]> enlightened us thusly:
>On Wed, 23 Aug 2006 18:34:22 +0100, Richard Brookman
><[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> ...
>> my work PC and my
>> home laptop get used by just the one person - me. The only difference
>> (as
>> far as I know, which ain't much) is that the work PC runs off the central
>> server, so all the AV software, firewall etc are remote from my desktop.
>> (Thinks - might have answered own question, turn off the AV as an
>> experiment.)
>
>AV == Anti Virus? never use it, on any platform.
You must be lucky, or live right. I don't use OE and I take pains not to
open suspicious stuff, but still get the odd one spotted by the AV software.
The only one I had trouble with is one I opened deliberately to see what it
was, having carelessly not updated the AV first. AV now on daily automatic
updates...
>Also - Firewall should be a separate box/appliance/unit dedicated to the
>task of firewalling - anything else renders it more likely to
>interference. Firewalls running as software on the box they're
>'protecting' are about as much use as a chocolate Tea Pot.
I'd rate them more useful than that, although you're right that for the bets
firewalling ability you need a separate box. not always practical though,
and a software one is better than none. Correctly configured, the better
software ones do things that a separate box won't - Outpost for example
allows detailed control of what apps are allowed to do and where they're
allowed to connect, and also flags changes in apps for you to check - if you
know you've not changed any software and it pops up with "components have
changed" then you think "'ello, why's that, then?"
granted that lot is more than yer normal firewall stuff, but it's very
handy. Almost all the apps here are only allowed to connect to where I say
they can, for example: the mail program can only do POP and SMTP to the mail
server, not to any other address. Granted it could send viruses through
that server, but if a virus were to get onto the machine and attempt to send
mail by pretending to be OE for example, it'd get nowhere.
--
Austin Shackles.
www.ddol-las.net my opinions are just that
"Would to God that we might spend a single day really well!"
Thomas À Kempis (1380 - 1471) Imitation of Christ, I.xxiii.