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What is a virus and how does it work? Understanding basic principles
will help you avoid them. This presentation on "Virus
Busting" explains the basics of what viruses are and how to protect
yourself.
Get McAfee VirusScan for Free!
Students, staff and faculty of the University of Michigan may download McAfee
VirusScan anti-virus software for the UM Virus Buster's Web site for their
personal computers. Install it
on your computer, and be sure to keep it up to date - you need the latest
protection and patches to be safe.
McAfee VirusScan is installed on
Business School office, classroom and lab computers.
Keep Your Anti-Virus Software Updated Weekly
Updates are
available from your software vendor's web site. Networked Business School Computers with McAfee typically
auto-update on Thursdays if the computer is turned on and a user is logged into
the network on it.
Have an Always-On Internet Connection?
If you have a cable modem or DSL connection, you may wish to purchase
anti-virus software such as Black Ice or Zone Alarm that is designed for these
always-on connections. The safest practice is to keep your computer turned
off when not in use.
Smart Practices
It is important that
every member of our community observes anti-virus practices.
The Business School has been hit by several viruses over the
last several years by members not following these simple rules of thumb:
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Do not open
attachments (or messages) that you are not expecting, even if it appears to be
from someone you know. Many "worm" viruses spread by using the
personal e-mail address book on the infected computer, so it can appear to come
from that sender. At this point in time, you cannot get a virus from
opening the email message, only the attachment. If in doubt and you want
to open it, check with the sender first to confirm they really did send it to
you.
Be especially wary of files with .exe, .doc and .xls extensions, among others that carry executable and macro viruses.
Typically graphic files with .jpg or .gif files do not transmit viruses.
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Scan floppy and
zip disks with a complete disk scan before opening any files
on the disk. Don't rely on the automatic scan to catch boot sector
start-up viruses triggered by turning on your computer with the disk left in
the drive.
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Don't spread
hoax virus rumors or chain mail - the taxing of mail servers from this
is the
"virus" itself.
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Do not download
executable program files of questionable origin. Many viruses are spread
by attaching to programs that launch the virus when the program is run.
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Do not rely on
anti-virus software to protect you from the above - viruses are designed to
circumvent the current protection.
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Keep your anti-virus
software up to date. Typically vendors provide updates weekly or
sometimes daily when new viruses hit. UM's auto-updating version of McAfee
VirusScan regularly checks for updates when the computer is connected to the
Internet.
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