Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Computer Networking Consultants
Computer networking consultants can help your organisation design and install the ideal network for its needs. Getting the right computer network – which is linking all the computers so they can share information, use the Internet and devices like...

How To Remove One Operating System from a Dual Boot Windows XP Computer
In Windows Xp, you can install two operating systems on the same hard disk of one computer. Whether you have two copies of Windows Xp, or two different operating systems, then you end up with dual boot machine when you restart your Windows...

10 Tips on Computer Clutter Clean Up
10 Tips on Computer Clutter Clean Up by Eve Abbott, excerpted from her new book, How to Do Space Age Work with a Stone Age Brain TM The secret to getting and staying organized is the same as the answer to "How do you eat a computer?". The answer is...

6 Essential Steps to Protect Your Computer On the Internet For Free
Recently one of my friends asked me to check out if his computer was infected by virus. He suspected because occasionally the computer was shut down automatically when connected to internet. My first thought was the Sasser worm 60 seconds auto...

Secrets to SpyProofing Your Computer In Four Easy Steps
Secrets to SpyProofing Your Computer In 4 Easy Steps DO I NEED TO SPY PROOF MY COMPUTER? I think the question should be, do I use my computer for anything that would best remain private and confidential? Computer monitoring has become a huge...

 
Are You Being Lied to About Computer Phones (VoIP)?


Are You Being Lied to About Computer Phones (VoIP)?
By Dee Scripİ All rights reserved.

The majority of computer phone programs, such as those operating on Peer-to-Peer (P2P) networks, are unsafe and provide a conduit for hackers to enter your network or computer, access personal and confidential information, as well as deploy viruses or worms.
Clients of P2P computer phone systems are prime targets and/or launching points for malicious hack attacks for two simple reasons:
1. They provide a harbor for hackers when clients download the service's file-sharing programs or electronic files
2. They provide a harbor for hackers because the service operates on publicly open and interpretable industry standard protocols and industry standard codec.
A Staff Report submitted by the Government Reform Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives (May 2003), entitled "File-Sharing Programs and Peer-to-Peer Networks – Privacy and Security Risks", stated that users of these programs have inadvertently made their personal information available to other users. "A search of one P2P network found at least 2,500 Microsoft Money backup files, which stores the users' personal financial records, available for download."
Personal information that can be hack attacked include, among others:
1. Tax returns containing you name, address, and social security numbers of not only you, but your spouse and dependents,
2. Financial information such as income and investments,
3. Medical records,
4. Business files such as contracts and personnel evaluations,
5. Attorney-client communications
Spyware/Adware programs are frequently bundled into P2P file-sharing software.
Spyware/Adware programs collect personal information for marketers and provide access to your computer by malicious hackers. In an article located on Vnunet.com entitled "Users Fume at Grokster 'Drive-by Download'", these two programs are able to ".
• redirect a user's homepage to a different website,
• install a new browser toolbar,
• insert entries into the users' browser bookmark list,
• reinstall itself after uninstallation,
• and ultimately crash a client's system."
Sinister Supernodes
Another grave concern for both individuals and businesses is inadvertently authorizing your computer to be used as a supernode just by downloading a service's P2P software. A supernode occurs when your computer is arbitrarily assigned as a hub.
By using the software for P2P services, your computer's disk space, bandwidth, and processing power are enlisted to help other customers on the same system operate their software more efficiently because of their own network or firewall constraints. This can be applicable even when your computer is turned off.
Not only can this invasion overload systems or networks with excessive data, disk space, and network bandwidth, unscrupulous hackers can also insert arbitrary code in each supernode's address space, or even crash all supernodes.
Peer-to-Peer (P2P) systems such as Skype, operate by taking bandwidth (information carrying capacity) from customers on their service to assist other customers using their service - analogous to a symbiotic relationship. The tools and authorization to perform these activities are bundled in the software their customers download to access their VoIP service.

The above information is an excerpt taken from an in-depth and exclusive Report entitled "Why Hackers Love Computer Phones – A Shocking Report You Must Read!" by Dee Scrip available only at http://www.whypay4calls.com/gtp/to.pl?l=ART-02
**Attn Ezine editors / Site owners **
Feel free to reprint this article in its entirety in your ezine or on your site so long as you leave all links in place, do not modify the content and include our resource box as listed above.


Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.