iSnare.com - Free Content Articles Directory
Authors Contents [Advanced Search][Add OpenSearch][Job Search]
Distribute your articles to thousands of article sites for only $2 and below! Read more...

Index  Computers and Technology
 

How Safe is it to be Online?

 
[ Contact the Author] [ Send to a Friend] [ Article Publisher] [Make PDF] [ Print] [ Bookmark & Share]
 
Read our Terms of Service before reprinting this article. The submitter specified above has claimed the rights to this article.
Sandra Prior

Sometimes it seems that you can never be safe on the Internet. You update your antivirus program, then read some story about the dangers of cookies or something. You download a ‘cookie crusher’ utility, then find out about port scanning. And spyware. And all the scary things hackers can do too your system. It’s amazing that anyone has the courage to go online at all.

Or at least it would be if all these things were actually true. Look more closely and you discover that many of these threats are exaggerations at best, and don’t apply to most people. Learning to pick these out is very useful, because it enables you to concentrate on the real threats, and there are plenty of those.

Understanding which problems really are scary isn’t the end of the matter, though – you need to know where to go for help. Unfortunately, there are plenty of sites with misleading security information, or others trying to sell you protection software based on promises that simply cannot be true. Picking fact from fiction can be difficult, so what should you do?

Networking Basics

All computers on the Internet have a unique IP address, represented by four numbers between 0 and 255 and separated by periods – for example, 217.46.129.21. When you enter a URL in your browser, it must be translated to an IP address before you can reach the site. It’s not only big websites that have IP addresses, of course – you have one too. Whenever your browser requests a page from a website, it also tells that site what your IP address is, so the site can send the information back to you.

There’s more to Internet identities than IP addresses. Let’s take a web server as an example; as well as letting you view web pages, it might have FTP server software running so that you can browse for files to download. The same computer might even function as a mail server, sending and receiving messages. Information relating to any of these functions can arrive at any time – receiving a web page request right in the middle of being sent a large email, for example. So, how do you keep them organized?

The answer is ports (a port doesn’t refer to a physical connection, like the serial port on your PC – it’s purely a virtual thing). When your browser sends a command to a web server, it will use the default http port 80, while FTP commands go to port 21. On the server, each program is said to be ‘listening’ to a particular port only, and will ignore commands from anywhere else.

Once again, this scheme applies just as much to the humble home based PC or Mac as a big web server. Both have these ports, and both may be giving out more information than you realize – unless you know how to close them down.

The Risks

Are you really at risk by other Internet computers using your IP address and ports? One measure of protection is provided by the way IP addresses are typically allocated. If you use a standard modem connection to dial up your ISP over a normal telephone line then you’ll find most ISPs give you a different IP address every time you connect, making it very difficult for anyone to target you specifically.

On the other hand, anyone with an ‘always on’ connection, perhaps via ADSL or a cable modem may have one IP address which stays the same (for a while anyway). And with the existence of programs called port scanners that can quickly check thousands of IP addresses for unsecured PCs, going online has to involve some level of risk, doesn’t it?

Well, it depends on how your system is set up. Don’t forget that while you can browse a web or FTP server freely; it’s because that computer is running special software to make it possible, and PCs aren’t set up this way by default.

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

Subscribe to Sandra Prior’s Online Newsletter and get up to date Computer Technology News delivered right to your email box for free. See website for details http://usacomputers.rr.nu and http://sacomputers.rr.nu
Article Tags: address [See Dictionary], ip [See Dictionary], server [See Dictionary]
Got a question about this article? Ask the community!
Article published on January 26, 2009 at Isnare.com
 
Rate this article:

World of Warcraft: Eye of the Storm
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

Eye of the Storm is the most recent battleground to appear in World of Warcraft Introduced with The Burning Crusade expansion, this ostensibly seems like a fairly straightforward game of controlling key areas of a map...

Apple IPhone 3G 8GB
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

The Apple iPhone 3G 8GB is probably the most anticipated pieces of technology this year; of course it's been out in the US for a while now with much anger from the US consumers over AT&T's iron grip approach to the use of the iPhone...

How to Slipstream Windows
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

Having wiped all of the superfluous and stodgy files off our main drive and pasted a crisp, clean install on top of that lovely uncluttered space, we really don't relish the thought of having to go through the long and arduous process of updating, patching and fixing absolutely everything all over again...

Intel's Larrabee GPU
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

Intel's brand new graphics chip is made of lots of ancient Pentium processors Is that potty or pretty prescient...

Radical Motherboards
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

PCs are phenomenally flexible, configurable devices That's kinda why we love 'em so much...

The CD Revolution and Graphics
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

Games were getting too big, and floppies too unreliable A 35-inch floppy could hold a megabyte and a half, and it wasn't uncommon to get five or six of them for a game...

Asus P5Q Deluxe
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

Yet another chipset from Intel who evidently appear to be somewhat dissatisfied with the 10 or so chipsets they've released in the past year...

A Brief History of Games Technology
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

As arcades boomed, moving from simple games of Pong and Pacmon to exciting arcade games...

Locking Your Computer’s Doors
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

Most people won’t have File and Printer sharing enabled on their home computers, but they may still have other vulnerabilities...

Encryption Keeps Your Personal Data Private
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

When something is stored on your computer or sent by email, it means others can get their hands on it...

Coping With Crashes
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

General protection faults and invalid page faults are guaranteed to strike fear into the hearts of PC users everywhere...

Make Yourself a Lean, Mean Browsing Machine
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

We all decry the Internet for being too slow, but the real causes of your download dilemma could be a little closer to home...

How to Make Your Browser Love You
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

For richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health…you need your browser, and your browser needs you We lead you to the alter...

Start a Gaming Clan
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

The PC may be the definite online gaming platform, but most people don’t use it to its full potential...

The Doom of the Hard Disk Drive
Submitted by: Sandra Prior

Flash memory may not be taking over from your regular hard disk in the near future, but it could still be playing a significant role before long...

How to Prevent the Noise on Your Car Stereo
Submitted by: Jack Wylde

If you do not know or cannot comprehend what that term means “noise” from your car audio system then you perhaps don’t own a car audio system yet...

Ways a Camera Phone Can Help in an Emergency
Submitted by: Seomul Evans

In an emergency you will require to allow and welcome help, and later it is over, you will have to return, repair, and rebuild...

Facts About Cell Phones Health Risks?
Submitted by: Seomul Evans

Through the long time, there have been so many rumors concerning the wellness risks of cell phones But we are a society that would almost rather die, than give them up...

How to Pick a Car Cassette Player
Submitted by: Jack Wylde

Cassette player for your car audio system is the most basic kind of stereo system that you can purchase for your car...

How Your Web Hosting Can Help Grow Your Business
Submitted by: Frank Hendrickson

One of the most popular ways of marketing and promotion in this time and age is through online or what everybody calls as internet marketing, web marketing or e Marketing...

Web Conferencing: Fast, Easy and Reliable Way of Connecting to People
Submitted by: Allison Clarke

Are you cringing by the thought of planning a conference Making travel arrangements, organizing numerous agendas, trying to secure a location, and the expenses will surely make anyone dismayed in setting up a conference...

Best Mini Netbooks - Mini Laptop Reviews - Samsung - Lenovo - Acer
Submitted by: James J Clarkson

Netbooks are very quickly gaining in popularity It was not all that long ago that you could go to a computer store and see only one or two brands of netbooks...

Will You Still Find Cheap Car Audio Systems?
Submitted by: Jack Wylde

You will be surprised as to how untrue the stereotype theory of cheap audio systems equals to bad sound quality actually is...

How to Improve the Sound Quality of Your Car Audio
Submitted by: Jack Wylde

The truth is that if you just buy the car with no additional sound accessories, the sound quality of your car stereo system might not be the kind that you would like it to be...

Car Cassette Player: Two Features
Submitted by: Jack Wylde

The cassette player for the car audio system is the most basic kind of stereo system that you can have for your car...

Why You Need Car Alarm For Your Car Stereo Systems
Submitted by: Jack Wylde

You must understand the importance of an alarm system for a car that has some kind of car stereo system installed in it...

Plexiglas For Your Car Audio
Submitted by: Jack Wylde

Surely you have heard of Plexiglas and all the benefits that surround such an absolutely brilliant invention for mankind...

Shopping For Car Speakers
Submitted by: Jack Wylde

If you have your own car and if you have bought it recently you know then exactly how much time of the day you will be spending in zipping around in it...

Your Car Audio System Should Suit You
Submitted by: Jack Wylde

Car audio systems are a great source of enjoyment for the person who is driving the car as well as the others who are not; in fact a stereo inside a car has now become almost like a necessity for people around the world...

The Importance of a Car Audio Equalizer
Submitted by: Jack Wylde

For most of us, when we own a car a must-have is a car audio system for our own driving enjoyments as well as for those being driven around...

Isnare.com Footer Divider

© 2004-2009. Isnare Free Articles - An Isnare Online Technologies Free Articles Project. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy