How to Avoid Being A Target of Identity Theft, Fraud and Scams [author:George McQuade Public time:May 22, 2007] |
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Hollywood, CA — People who share their files on the Internet may be playing with fire a new study says. The Department of Commerce’s United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) report reveals people who store any type of sensitive data on their home computers—particularly computers to which children, teenagers, or college students might have access—confront circumstances similar to those faced by governmental or corporate IT managers.
“I don’t think parents would allow their children to download free music or movies if they knew who their kids were sharing files with,” said Safwat Fahmy, CEO & president, SafeMedia Corp., Boca Raton, Fl. “Parents should know that free illegal downloading of music and movies (via Peer-2-Peer filesharing) can be dangerous.”
The USPTO report “Filesharing Programs and “Technological Features to Induce Users to Share” found that “home computers are often used by multiple people and the person who best understands which files are sensitive and where they are stored may not be the person who installs and runs a filesharing program.”
The report reveals that at least four of the (P-2-P filesharing) programs analyzed have deployed partial-uninstall features: If users uninstall one of these programs from their computers, the process will leave behind a file that will cause any subsequent installation of any version of the same program to share all folders shared by the “uninstalled” copy of the program. Whenever a computer is used by more than one person, this feature ensures that users cannot know which files and folders these programs will share by default.
Federal prosecutors are now requiring social websites to reveal the emails of registered sex offenders. “If teenagers are filesharing music, who knows how many criminals might be sharing personal information, credit cards, bank passwords and social security numbers with scheme operators who buy them,” said Fahmy, who created Clouseau®, a practical and inexpensive technology to stop illegal downloading of copyrighted materials
on P-2-P networks. “They’re also sharing family photo files with everyone,” he noted.
To avoid becoming a victim, Safwat offers this advice when parents allow their children to surf the internet. 1-visit legitimate websites that have secured seals. 2-do not offer personal information on any websites. 3-Report any suspicious websites that offer items that seem too good to be true.
The damage being caused by P-2-P networks goes unnoticed, because its free, and most often it is an illegal transfer of copyright protected files,” explained Fahmy. The USPTO report “Technological Features to Induce Users to Share”, published in November, 2006 disclosed five user-dangerous features hidden or disguised in P2P programs. The programs included everything from allowing hackers to exploit computer networks to stealing sensitive data to infecting computers or networks with malicious code.
Otherinfo:MAYO Communications & MAYO PR
Los Angeles, CA
www.MayoPR.com
www.LaEntertainmentPublicity.com
818-340-5300 or 818-618-9229.
Printed From:http://www.free-press-release.com/news/200705/1179824122.html Source:Free Press Release
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