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Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Anti Virus Protection From Your Internet Service Provider

Getting anti virus protection has always been something that’s been left to you, the private citizen trying to protect his interests with a product chosen from among dozens on the market. But now, there’s a new trend that appears to be starting up – with at least one player to begin with. Comcast, the cable TV and Internet service provider is starting to roll out nationally, a service that will monitor your connection for you for any activity that matches the profile of what botnets do. A botnet is a kind of malware that is placed on hundreds of computers connected to the Internet. They are controlled by one entity at a remote location that bids them to do all kinds of undesirable things – like sending spam mails abroad.

Should this worry you? Since regular antivirus protection keeps an eye on your computer by completely keeping your hard drive under its control, does this mean that you’re going to have Comcast snooping into your hard drive? Not exactly. And even if the company tried, it couldn’t get away with it. This plan is different. Botnets are was most dangerous threats on the Internet today. It can be very difficult for an individual to catch a single bot on a single computer. Because they are designed to kind of change form rapidly so as to evade detection by regular anti virus protection. They’re not exactly viruses. Viruses are supposed to just attack your computer, bring on a certain kind of damage to your computer and to propagate. Botnets aren’t designed to do any one thing. An infection just places one invisibly on your computer, and it keeps in touch over the Internet with the designer who made it. The designer can manipulate to do his bidding. It’s pretty science-fiction like stuff.

At first, Internet service providers like Comcast tried to battle the problem by giving their subscribers free antivirus. But regular anti virus protection didn’t really succeed in tackling the problem, so frequently do bots change to evade detection. So, now they want to try to protect you – on the network level. When the Comcast central server sees that there is a certain kind of behavior coming in from all kinds of customer computers, it’ll be able to spot a pattern and raise an alarm. There are other things it can do too. If a botnet tries to take over a customer’s computer to be able to turn it into a spam-sending machine, the server will be able to notice that there is an unusual amount of e-mail activity there. And it will be able to shut it down.

So what will Comcast do once it finds out that your computer is infected by a bot? They’ll charge you $100 to clean your system up.

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Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Final Proof: Internet Explorer Users Are NOT the Sharpest Tools in the Box

Internet Explorer 6 has just become the new euphemism for calling people stupid. And it’s not just IE6, it’s pretty much anyone who uses Internet Explorer.

Internet Explorer 6Of course, calling people stupid is not particularly PC these days, so one has to back up such name-calling with hardcore science. Thankfully for anyone predisposed to calling people names, we now have the data. According to a recent study conducted by Canadian company, AptiQuant, people who use IE 6 were found to have an IQ lower than 80 (on average). The study, titled “Intelligence Quotient (IQ) and Browser Usage” took into account the type of browser usage among 101,326 individuals over 16 years old. Chrome and Firefox users had an average IQ of 110, while Opera and Camino users had an average IQ of 120.

Naturally, many will see the results of this study as nothing but pseudo-scientific nonsense, after all, there are bound to be very intelligent people who use IE6. Such criticism however, would belie the almost universally accepted truth among web users: people who use IE6 are not very sharp. And it’s not just IE6; people who use Bing are also considered “slow”. That’s been the sentiment for years, with many advertisers caring to only target people using Google Adwords for the savvy of Google’s user base.

The results of the study will, I am sure, affect people in one extreme or the other, but what can’t be denied however, is the fact that some people are just not as smart as others. In the grand scheme of things it’s really not a big deal—some people are tall, some are short. We just now know that the no-so-smart people are Internet Explorer fans.

Perhaps the study was commissioned by Microsoft in an effort to get people to ditch IE6. What do you think? Watch the video below to see how IE6 tests against its modern versions.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=zVbppwcBZ6g



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