25 Apr
Posted by James Redder as Computers
Coming up with online sources for her law school thesis on money laundering was a task that was made simpler for a certain student with the help of Google. This easy tool was extremely useful to the student in her writing process. A couple months after beginning her project, the student became distressed to discover that her trusty search engine began leading her to a web page unrelated to money laundering.
Though she originally believed it was a glitch in the internet search systems, the persistence of the annoyances led her to believe that she had been bugged. As far as irritations go, human beings that bug us are the most easy to fend off. The law student, however, had been infected with a far more persistence predator to fend off: adware and spyware programs. As her computer was primarily for personal school-related use, the student’s technology skills were constricted to the most basic of online research and writing.
Many computer problems that give people like the student in the above scenario difficulty are caused by spyware and adware. In 2000, the word ’spyware,’ which had been around since 1995, became a fixture in most people’s computer dialogue. This refers to any software program or script which allows admission to the computer owner’s personal information.
This is done by studying logging keystrokes, web browsing history and even scanning a user’s hard drive. Though spyware employs the kind of methodology that sounds like it came out of a James Bond movie, anyone can be a victim. It is not an exaggeration to call the people affected by spyware victims because nobody wants their internet activities to be monitored without their consent. Admittedly spyware has beneficial uses such as allowing the tracking of criminals, but those potential uses are frequently ignored as crooks use the program for their own criminal activities, such as stealing credit card information. Because of the hostile nature of these potential infiltrations, every computer should have an updated anti-spyware program.
Along with spyware, blocking adware and malware can help protect most individuals from attacks. It is not difficult to find, online, many helpful spyware and adware blocker programs. Blockers are a great resource because they forbid any future downloads of these nasty bugs and clean up and discard your system of current ones.
Summary
By preventing typical computer usage, spyware, adware, and malware can be just as troublesome for the average computer user as the self replicating viruses and worms. Both the individual programs and the computer itself can experience a drastic decline in speed after the computer has been infected with these programs. Along with the trouble they cause, occasionally spyware is sneaky enough to hide from detection, which allows the crime to continue unpunished. Being proactive with a good blocker is the way that a computer owner should protect his system from allowing these programs to cause his computer harm.
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