Portable Apps..?
Lynch, Jonathan
bnz2 at cdc.gov
Fri Jan 13 09:35:29 EST 2006
Someone should create an antivirus program meant to be installed on a
USB drive, and call it The USB Prophylactic, or some other play on the
concept of a condom for your USB drive - meant to protect your computer
from the dangers of STDs (Software Transmitted Diseases).
-----Original Message-----
From: use-revolution-bounces at lists.runrev.com
[mailto:use-revolution-bounces at lists.runrev.com] On Behalf Of Thomas
McGrath III
Sent: Friday, January 13, 2006 8:28 AM
To: chipp at chipp.com; How to use Revolution
Subject: Re: Portable Apps..?
Safe Portable App-ing
An important thing to keep in mind when using portable applications
is that they can be used to spread viruses between machines. While
this isn't as much of an issue when you own or are responsible for
both the machines you are using it on (say work and home), it can be
a very big issue when you use a portable app on an untrusted or
unknown machine (school, internet cafe, family member's PC, etc). For
this reason, it is important that you practice Safe Portable App-ing!
The Checklist
* Use a solid antivirus program on your primary PC and
keep its
virus definitions up to date.
* Scan your PC and portable drive for viruses on a regular
basis.
* Whenever you plug your portable drive into an unknown
computer,
you should assume that it may now be infected with a virus. If the PC
has a virus that is currently in memory, it may attempt to infect
your portable applications as soon as you plug it in.
* When you then plug your portable drive into another
computer
(after an unknown), you should first scan it for viruses before
running any of your applications. (Most antivirus software will make
this available to you by right-clicking on your drive in Explorer or
My Computer.) That way, if it is infected, you'll know before you run
your applications and the new computer will not be infected.
* Always wait until the drive access light has stopped
blinking and
then click the icon in your system tray to 'Safely Remove' your
device. Don't just remove it. Just because the portable app's window
is closed doesn't mean the app has fully closed and finished writing
to the disk.
* Back up your portable applications on a regular basis.
If you follow these simple rules, you'll be able to enjoy your
portable applications without getting stuck with a virus or losing
your data. As always, there is still the risk of getting a new virus
that your antivirus program can't yet detect, but the probability
would be relatively low, and you run the same risk whenever you
download a file from the internet.
Thomas J McGrath III
3mcgrath at adelphia.net
Lazy River Software(tm) - http://www.lazyriversoftware.com
Lazy River Metal Art(tm) - http://www.lazyriversoftware.com/metal.html
Meeting Wear(tm) - http://www.cafepress.com/meetingwear
Semantic Compaction Systems - http://www.minspeak.com
SCIconics, LLC - http://www.sciconics.com/sciindex.html
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