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Phuket Live Wire: Why the Internet died

Phuket Gazette

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NO RETURNS: If you break the Internet you will become a Social Media pariah. Photo: Theseoduke

PHUKET: -- It is my sad duty to report to you how and why the Internet died last Monday (July 9). The DNSChanger virus took down the internet, and I for one will lament its passing.

All of the major news sources warned you about it. Huffington Post said, "The end is nigh, according to the FBI. Internet Doomsday will strike us all on July 9."

Fox News has been flashing scare stories, er, posting warning messages for months. Reuters. AP. MSNBC. ABC. McAfee. Starting in April, all of those reliable news outlets screamed about the "Internet Doomsday" on July 9.

I received a half-dozen emails from people on Phuket in the week leading up to July 9, with some people frantically asking how they could keep their systems going if the Internet broke.

Oh. Wait a second. The Internet didn’t break on July 9. Imagine that! Last Monday wasn’t Internet doomsday. In fact, it was kind of like any other Monday on the Internet.

Folks, if you really want to believe the scaremongering and click-baiting, you have every right to do so. It sells newspapers and draws advertisers. But at least get the story straight, and don’t panic other people with your disinformation, OK?

I wrote an article in the May 3, 2012 Windows Secrets Newsletter about DNSChanger (W: bit.ly/JrEMiA). My conclusion two months ago hasn’t changed a bit: the hype’s a crock. Always has been.

Estimates vary, but between 10,000 and 20,000 people had their access to the Internet temporarily disrupted on Monday because they had ignored all sorts of warnings (including direct warnings broadcast to infected machines by Google and Facebook), and just continued to use their infected machines without cleaning them up.

Cleaning the mess takes all of about a minute. If you’ve been updating your PC and/or using Microsoft Security Essentials – even if you have a pirate copy of Windows – Microsoft cleaned up your computer months ago.

I like to rail about mainstream news sources that "report" on technical topics, and botch them beyond recognition. This is just the latest in a long, long stream of offal disguised as journalism coming from writers who don’t have a clue. They’re egged on by the antivirus manufacturers who want to sell you more "safety" software, when all you need is the free, simple Microsoft Security Essentials.

If you can’t stand the idea of getting protection from the company that made the product being protected, you can always use AVG Free or ESET NOD32, but you have to be careful to avoid the paid versions.

There’s a reason why AV companies make so much money: they feed on fear and ignorance, two traits in wild abundance in the computer milieu.

Symantec Corp (the Norton people) now has a market capitalization of US$10 billion. Intel bought McAfee two years ago for US$8 billion. AVG is worth US$800 million. Moscow-based Kaspersky is worth more than US$1.5 billion, based on a valuation in January 2011.

My suggestion: don’t get your computer news from mainstream publications. If you see a tantalizing computer headline (e.g., "computer virus zaps San Diego fireworks show" which appeared yesterday) assume that the people who wrote it don’t know what they’re talking about.

And if the headline makes you reach for your pocketbook, take at least a minute or two to check with reputable sources before you part with your hard-earned baht.

By the way, to those of you who wrote telling me that DNSChanger is an FBI conspiracy designed to have normal citizens open up their computers so the FBI can snoop on them – oy!

The fact is that the FBI, in conjunction with police agencies worldwide, but especially in

Estonia, ran an admirable, complex take-down operation that left them in the unfortunate position of having to keep certain servers running, so infected PCs wouldn’t get knocked off the web abruptly.

I love a good conspiracy theory as much as the next guy, but some of the comments from the tin foil hat crowd on this one run way over the top. The FBI’s performance on this was simply outstanding.

If you want to talk about FBI meddling, let’s switch the subject to Kim Dotcom and the FBI’s unconscionable actions in New Zealand.

PCs4Kids update

Ross James, the director of the PCs4Kids project here in Phuket, has some very good news. "We’ve just learned that Microsoft has agreed to donate 50 licenses for Windows and 50 licenses for Office, to help local needy kids."

With licenses for the latest versions of Windows and Office in hand, the PCs4Kids project is now ready to sign up local school kids and mentors who are willing and able to help.

The project has 26 PCs ready to go.

"We need organizations – schools, local charities, orphanages, civic groups – to come up with kids who are interested in learning about computers, and mentors who know Windows and Office. Any interested organization should email me directly, [email protected]."

The project already has two recipients who were nominated by local groups. Aniwa "Oh" Plomtong from Rachaprachnukroh School in Kamala and "Arwoo," an engineering undergraduate student sponsored by the Rotary Club of Patong Beach, have received fully refurbished computers running licensed copies of Windows and Office.

"Our next goal is to find an internet service provider who will give these kids internet access," says Ross.

"We’re going to help these underprivileged kids develop skills that will support a future professional career in a variety of fields, including IT."

The PCs4Kids project, initially sponsored by the Rotary Club of Patong Beach, received an additional 30,000 baht in funding from Rotary District 3330, which covers southern Thailand. It’s been endorsed also by the Rotary Foundation for all of Thailand.

If you have a PC, monitor, keyboard, laptop, power supply, or other PC equipment – including memory – you can help by donating whatever you have, working or not. Simply bring it by one of the Sandwich Shoppes, in Chalong or Patong.

Woody's Sandwich Shoppes hold computer sessions under the tutelage of Seth Bareiss every other Wednesday afternoon, from 1 to 3pm. If you have a Windows problem that needs to be solved, drop by one of Seth’s free afternoon sessions. Details in the Phuket Gazette Events Calendar.

Live Wire is Woody Leonhard’s weekly snapshot of all things internet in Phuket.

Follow him on Twitter: @PhuketLiveWire, and "like" the pages at facebook.com/SandwichShoppe and facebook.com/phuketgazette.net

Source: http://www.phuketgaz...ticle16436.html

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-- Phuket Gazette 2012-07-17

Posted

It might have been better if the writer had split this into two articles to focus attention on the PCs4Kids project. I almost missed it after reading some of the rant that preceded it. The rant about DNSChanger reminded me (and a lot of you, I'm sure) about the Y2K flap in the late 1990s. After midnight on 1 Jan 2000 and the world having spent billions modifying software to replace 2 digit years with 4 digit years, it appeared that almost nothing happened on 1 Jan. Many articles like this one were written asking what the fuss was all about. Few writers bothered to speculate that all the time and effort might just have had something to do with the lack of a disaster.

As for using Windows Essentials, not everyone uses a PC, not everyone uses MS Essentials, and not everyone reads security newsletters. Using scare tactics for wide spread legitimate threats has its benefits, regardless of the lack if a catastrophe, or did it happen to some extent and was not reported? I, as many others I know, was relieved to have a simple way to test my DNS to be sure I had not been infected. If all users were both computer experts and computer security experts, Woody and a lot of other journalists might be out of a job, so be careful what you wish for. Sometimes it takes a scare to get the attention of hardworking people. A small dose of paranoia when using computers is a good preventive. As for Woody's complaint about news sources putting out computer security information, why shouldn't news sources disseminate news, as long as they stick to facts (and a bit of fright) in a short fuse situation?

In the meanwhile, I wonder how many people who might have volunteered for the PC4Kids program, did not do so because they did not read the entire article. Like Y2K and DNSChanger, we will never know.

BTW, I've been following Woody's excellent work in Windows Secrets for many years.

Posted
Folks, if you really want to believe the scaremongering and click-baiting, you have every right to do so. It sells newspapers and draws advertisers. But at least get the story straight, and don’t panic other people with your disinformation, OK?

Words of wisdom indeed.

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