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#1 By 655 (165.125.144.18) at Monday, February 06, 2006 11:17:48 AM
I'll break my vow of silence on this one. First, who's your ISP? Most ISP's (at least Time Warner and Verizon) servers are filtering for this crap. If you have your 'puters running through a router, make sure that you have the hardware firewall set to on and all availble security settings set correctly. As to AV, Norton has their problems - besids being a resource pig, their latest versions seem to miss the new stuff. Take a look at the offerings from Trend Micro and Computer @ssociates. Setting up with limited access is a good way to prevent unskilled users from downloading stuff like this. If the viruses are being delivered as bogus e-mails, check with your ISP to see if there are filter settings you can set up on line to prevent them from being delivered...i.e. if the subject line or e-mail content has common words like "Microsoft Update" or something similar. ---------------------------------------------- Work is for people who don't know how to surf Gateway Performance 1800 - P4 1.8gz, 512mb RAM, ATi Radeon 8500; SB Live Value; Windows XP Professional, Photoshop CS2, Nikon D2Hs and D100

#2 By 655 (165.125.144.18) at Monday, February 06, 2006 02:03:18 PM
That explains it. Some of the ads from these sites secretly plant trojans. If I recall, Norton doesn't always catch 'em. On one of my machines, McAfee caught a couple of ads trying to do that, and CA also catches the buggers. Take a look at your IE settings (Tools/Internet Options) and adjust the Security, Privacy and Advanced options to block cookies and other little nasties from being installed. ---------------------------------------------- Work is for people who don't know how to surf Gateway Performance 1800 - P4 1.8gz, 512mb RAM, ATi Radeon 8500; SB Live Value; Windows XP Professional, Photoshop CS2, Nikon D2Hs and D100



 

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