If you have visited a web site recently, it is a virtual certainty that you have seen pay-per-click advertising links. Actually, you are here on my site reading this post, and I have pay-per-click advertising links, so it is an absolute certainty. Most likely, they were from the current king of the pay...
Posted to
Tony Bradley, Microsoft MVP
(Weblog)
by
Anonymous
on
01-19-2008
Filed under: internet, microsoft, web, News and Info, marketing, AdSense, Google, ppc, adCenter, advertising, pay-per-click
While the Internet has become a necessary tool for business and also provides a vast array of options for personal use, it does have a dark side. Over the past several years, the Internet has become an increasingly dangerous place to work and play, with viruses, Phishing, Pharming and malicious web sites...
Tom D'Auria invited me back to talk more computer security on his IMI TechTalk radio show. I appeared on the show in November of 2006 to promote my book, Essential Computer Security . We did not get to cover all of our questions in the time allotted, so I will be back on the show on Sunday, February...
Posted to
Tony Bradley, Microsoft MVP
(Weblog)
by
tonybradley
on
02-10-2007
Filed under: internet, home computer, microsoft, security, backup, restore, internet explorer, ie7, zero-day, essential computer security, imi-techtalk, radio, Tom D'Auria, interview
With Vista, Microsoft introduced a new security concept to help protect your computer. Rather than relying on discretionary controls, like NTFS file and folder permissions which users can assign and change, Vista also has new mandatory controls. WIC, or Windows Integrity Control (also referred to as...
Posted to
Tony Bradley, Microsoft MVP
(Weblog)
by
tonybradley
on
02-05-2007
Filed under: internet, windows vista, microsoft, security, user, internet explorer, ie7, web, protected mode, wic, object, mandatory integrity control, trust, windows integrity control, mic
According to a study compiled by the Washington Post's Brian Krebs , Internet Explorer 6 was vulnerable for 284 out of 365 days in 2006. That amounts to over 77% of the year. What does that mean? It means the for 3/4 of the year there were known vulnerabilities affecting Internet Explorer 6 for which...
Posted to
Tony Bradley, Microsoft MVP
(Weblog)
by
tonybradley
on
01-07-2007
Filed under: internet, home computer, windows xp, microsoft, security, vulnerability, patch, internet explorer, ie7, web, worm, hack, firefox, zero-day
Less than a month from its official release to corporate customers, a vulnerability was already discovered that affects Vista. According to Microsoft and others, the vulnerability can only be exploited if an attacker already has access to the system, meaning they would need to be physically sitting in...
Posted to
Tony Bradley, Microsoft MVP
(Weblog)
by
tonybradley
on
01-03-2007
Filed under: internet, windows vista, microsoft, security, flaw, vulnerability, patch, hyponnen, f-secure, worm, hack
A flaw in the way Microsoft Word 2000 documents are processed could allow an attacker to execute malicious code remotely on vulnerable systems according to a Secunia alert. Exploit code has been identified in the wild and no patch is currently available, so Secunia has rated the Advisory as Extremely...