The complaints are rampant
Have you found yourself plagued lately by e-mail messages like:
"Returned
Mail - the message you sent contained a virus!"
"Delivery Error - Your
e-mail was infected with the SoBig Virus"
"Warning - Norton detected a virus
in the attachment you sent to somebody@some_stranger.com
If you think you do not deserve messages like that, you are probably correct.
With the recent amount of viruses infecting people's computers, a tremendous
number of messages are getting sent from infected computers to other people, and
the offending e-mails are being disguised to appear that they came from you.
That's right - you didn't send the message, another computer sent the
message, but yours is the return address that other computer used. So, when a
"receiver" detects the virus, they naturally tell you about it, thinking you are
the one who sent the e-mail.
I even got a message from an angry recipient the other day that thought I was
sending him "My Details." He was understandably upset, just upset at the wrong
person.
What can you do?
The best thing to do is realize you can't do a whole lot, except to BE SURE
your computer is free of viruses. To accomplish that, there are three things you
need to do:
First, that means you make sure you have your anti-virus software up to date
with the latest signatures. It is a good idea to configure your anti-virus
software to update itself automatically once a day. Make sure you perform a
system-wide virus scan at least once a week, and leave the "automatic
protection" features turned on. If you don't have an anti-virus program yet,
then I suggest Norton Anti-Virus (and if you want a personal firewall to keep
hackers out of your computer, a bargain is to buy NIS - Norton Internet Security
because it comes with both Norton Anti-Virus and a firewall program.) Find
information on these tools at http://www.symantec.com/
Second, be sure to be going to Microsoft's Windows Update section and being
sure you have all the latest patches for Windows. You will find the updates by
clicking here: http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com/
Third, if you are using any Microsoft Office products (Outlook, Word, Excel,
etc) then you also need to be going to Microsoft Office Update. Find these
updates at http://office.microsoft.com/productupdates
If your office is using other Microsoft products such as SQL Server, or
Exchange Server, updates for those products can be found at http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/
When will it end?
Some day, everyone will have good anti-virus tools on their computer and the
viruses will be stopped. Until that time, be sure to tell your associates to
protect themselves.