Latest Articles:



Downloading Spyware Removers: Think Before, not After
Just imagine: you are walking, say, towards your car, and all of a sudden somebody comes up to you and begins... polishing your shoes. Or even better example--a guy you've never met before opens the hood of your car, says the engine is broken and tries to persuade you to add some gadget your car desperately needs--and now! What you'd do if such a...

Is Spyware Slowing Your Computer Down To A Crawl?
Everyday more and more computers are becoming infected with Spyware and Adware (advertising tracking). No matter where you go on the web, someone is trying to sneak something on your computer. From honest web sites placing simple logon cookies, to paid advertising tracking your movements on the web, to malicious software that is designed to record...

Preventing Spyware by Locking Down Your Browser
Leaving your browser (Intenet Exployer) set to the default settings will allow websites to put spyware and browser hi-jacks on your computer via cookies. When your computer becomes filled with popups and slows to a halt, it is usually spyware at the backend causing your problem. One way to eliminate this is to lock down your browser....



Latest News:

Spyware: Telecom firms may face stiff fines
The Union law ministry has suggested a penalty on telecom service providers (licensees) equivalent to 100 per cent of their contract value if any equipment bought and installed by them is found to have any spyware or malware.

Android Spyware: Millions Downloaded Thievish Wallpaper App (Updated)
Mobile security firm Lookout announced today at the Black Hat security conference that millions of Android users had downloaded a wallpaper app that sends user information to a unknown site in China, reported VentureBeat . Concerns about app access to private information were raised last month, but this may be the first instance of Android malware in the wild. Android's enterprise-readiness has ...

Electric, Oil Companies Take Almost A Year To Fix Known Security Flaws
A penetration tester says he's found malware, spyware, gaming and even pornography servers on critic