Saturday, March 14, 2009

Tips that useful are from Yoda for those who know not already.

One of Yoda's first correspondents said that he challenged the use of "voluntarism" vs "volunteerism" ( finding Yoda's use to be correct and the second to be a different word ) and used Webster's for the purpose. This mention is not for vainglory but to supplement Webster's with what Yoda has found useful for several years:

http://www.answers.com

Founded by clever Israelis and with a stock ticker symbol ANSW, this is an on-line site that sits conveniently off to a side of your screen. It is both freely downloadable and free and also has a "one-click" feature that enables querying any word or phrase in machine-readable text with use of ALT - ENTER.

Yoda recommends it to anyone not yet aware of it. Try it and like it you will!

This will be the first of things that Yoda has found useful and wishes to pass on in the interests of general Utilitarianism and to further reciprocal altruism.

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How to tell, and what to do, if your computer is infected (from the AP)

  • Posted on Sun Mar 15, 2009 12:46PM EDT

- Computer-virus infections don't cause your machine to crash anymore.

Nowadays, the criminals behind the infections usually want your computer operating in top form so you don't know something's wrong. That way, they can log your keystrokes and steal any passwords or credit-card numbers you enter at Web sites, or they can link your infected computer with others to send out spam.

Here are some signs your computer is infected, tapped to serve as part of "botnet" armies run by criminals:

• You experience new, prolonged slowdowns. This can be a sign that a malicious program is running in the background.

• You continually get pop-up ads that you can't make go away. This is a sure sign you have "adware," and possibly more, on your machine.

• You're being directed to sites you didn't intend to visit, or your search results are coming back funky. This is another sign that hackers have gotten to your machine.

So what do you do?

• Having anti-virus software here is hugely helpful. For one, it can identify known malicious programs and disable them. If the virus that has infected your machine isn't detected, many anti-virus vendors offer a service in which they can remotely take over your computer and delete the malware for a fee.

• Some anti-virus vendors also offer free, online virus-scanning services.

• You may have to reinstall your operating system if your computer is still experiencing problems. It's a good idea even if you believe you've cleaned up the mess because malware can still be hidden on your machine. You will need to back up your files before you do this.

How do I know what information has been taken?

• It's very hard to tell what's been taken. Not every infection steals your data. Some just serve unwanted ads. Others poison your search result or steer you to Web sites you don't want to see. Others log your every keystroke. The anti-virus vendors have extensive databases about what the known infections do and don't do. Comparing the results from your virus scans to those entries will give you a good idea about what criminals may have snatched up.

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