You must visit this cartoon humor site - loads more of the same ….
Category : General, Info Security Standards
We’re currently investigating Information Security Standards, some links for us to come back to …
A seemingly, so far, good ISO site with good community content, with a lot of free 27k tools
Try The Windows Club.
We haven’t looked at any or all of these yet.
We’ve used Norton’s (Symantec) Security Suite for many years and found it to be reliable and trap most everything.
It has on the odd year, seemed to slow down low memory systems, but since 2009 this seems to have been resolved and it is now very slick.
However, another issue has surfaced. Their virus checker seems to be flagging loads and loads of perfectly reputable and fine software as “suspicious.insight”.
At first glance given the nature of Norton – it being a virus checker amongst other things – this would seem to be highlighting a virus or some sort of malware. But this IS NOT THE CASE.
The flagging of software with this particular “comment”, merely means that this software has not been sold to millions of people. Could have been sold to tens of thousands in the past though!
We know it is often true that is is better to be ‘safe than sorry’, but in this case Norton/Symantec have taken this concept way too far.
They are not saying the software that they are flagging with this tag have any kind of virus or malware associated with them – just that as they don’t know of the software being used by millions of people, then maybe it might, just might – even though their own virus validation systems have already checked it and found nothing else to highlight!
Hey – even we could write virus checking software that flags everything as ‘possibly having a virus’ unless it’s made by Microsoft, Google or Adobe! Easy! But not very useful.
This is SO harmful to software vendors who may lose tens of thousands of sales over this ridiculous attitude from a once well respected security company. Symantec have got the balance completely wrong here in the fight against the virus.
Here is Symantec’s view of their ”Reputation Based Security. Way OTT.
You can use this free service to encrypt your email text messages.
No information is passed across the internet until you have encrypted the message.
The encryption happens within your browser and only when you copy and paste the encrypted text into your email package and send it does anything pass across the internet.
The recipients of the email just go to the same web site and copy the encrypted message in (and enter the password of course) and press decrypt to reveal the message only to themselves.
Category : Featured Posts, General
Hello, and thanks for dropping by to our blog – we hope to keep your system safe and secure by providing advice on, and reviews of, desktop security software. Also we will be providing links and opinion on other security aspects we come across
Category : General, Online Security
If you’re new to the perils of online security, Barclays have sponsored this very high-level video view – with a few basic tips. Clearly they are pushing their ‘Pin Sentry’ solution.
Category : Featured Posts, Software 4 Review, Web Browsers
This is free software, we’re adding here to review at some point, before adding an article on the main site …
Based on Google’s Chrome Browser Engine the Comodo Dragon Web Browser is built with security as its prime focus.
Category : General, Software 4 Review
This is free software, we’re adding here to review at some point, before adding an article on the main site …











