The final word of advice for this lesson is that you should not run programs you dont know about. This is primarily related to email attachments, but can apply just about anywhere. It is mind-boggling how many people will receive an email claiming to be from Microsoft support with a pornographic message body written in broken English and still execute the attached file- as if Microsoft would send you an unsolicited joke or picture.
For the record, even when Microsoft support does send an alert or communication they never include file attachments. They only include links back to the Microsoft web site where you can download the file at your leisure. Not only would sending an executable file attachment cause problems in and of itself, but it would be very taxing on the Internet servers and routers if Microsoft sent an actual file attachment to all registered customers every time their was a new patch or vulnerability. The same is true for most other operating system and application vendors for the same reasons.
If you have even the slightest apprehension or suspicion about a file- dont open it. Its not worth infecting your system or unknowingly installing a Trojan on your system just to satisfy your curiosity to see if the attached joke really IS the funniest thing ever.
If you receive an email attachment or find some mysterious file on your computer and you just have a burning desire to open it and find out what it really is or does you should at the very least scan it for viruses. Make sure you are running the most current update of your antivirus software first and scan the file before executing it. You may also want to shut down your Internet connection first to prevent any virus or worm from propagating in the event that you do in fact become infected.
That does it for Lesson 8. To recap, the preventive and proactive steps that you can take to protect yourself and others are:
