Four security
tests
Click on the link to put your
system through each test
1.
Grc.com Vulnerability test
- Scroll down to Shield's up test -
Follow the instructions - all will be revealed ;)
2.
Symantec Security Check -
Test your computers exposure to
online security threats and learn how to make your computer more secure.
3.
Sygate Security Scan:
This will test the strength of
your firewall - and other security issues.
4.
Audit My PC
Privacy and Security Scans:
New to the field of internet security? Then you should at least
perform the following two security tests:
|
|
Privacy: |
Privacy: Start by visiting our
Internet Privacy Section; this checks your internet
connected computer for popular spyware and browser
vulnerabilities. Before you visit, copy some text to your
clipboard and imagine it's something confidential - you may be
surprised. The purpose of this test is to demonstrate that
improper browser configurations can make even the most secure
internet firewall useless. |
|
Security: |
Security: Visit the
Internet Security Section and choose Option 1. This
test is designed help determine what programs may be listening
on the most common ports. This is very important and may reveal
a destructive program masquerading as a benign application.
Such an application could give a malicious internet user
complete control of your system and security. |
5.
RV Scan (experts only) Identify whether a particular
Windows machine is vulnerable. Click on free Rvscan in the top right
section. You must enter some information to proceed.
Checking the defenses
from compulink.co.uk
How safe is your machine? Do you use a Personal
Firewall? David Dorn checks out how well his own PC copes with potential
Hacking and Trojan threats.
There’s a nasty breed of PC user out there in the big
bad world. The breed has the generic name of “Script Kiddy” – and it’s
best identified by its penchant for downloading hacking, cracking and
penetration tools from Web sites in order to play nasty tricks on
unsuspecting and innocent PC users. These tricks, though, include
information theft and, in some cases, the planting of Viruses and
Trojans.
Why?
Lord only knows why they do it. They obviously get a
kick out of it, and some, a little more malicious than most, will be
actively looking for information they can use to steal money and
paid-for services from you. Mostly, though, they do it because they can.
How?
Port scans, mostly, and back-door programs like Back
Orifice that allow them to get into your PC and trawl around your files,
reading, and perhaps altering, your information, as well as stealing
password lists and so forth (a .pwl file from your Windows directory can
reveal a lot about you – and there are Script Kiddy tools to crack
them).
Port scanning is quite clever, in some ways. There 65536
ports into your computer, some of which may be available when you’re
connected – if you’ve got Front Page in any of its guises, or
Dreamweaver, or any of a host of other Web building tools, you may
unwittingly have a Web server open to the world. You may have an FTP
server just waiting to be contacted. Telnet, HTTP, IRC – there’s a
boatload of ways a Script Kiddy could gain access to your PC. The only
way to block them is to use a Firewall – and in our opinion,
Zone Alarm is one of the only ones to use – let me tell you why.
Checking it out
I spend an awful lot of time connected to the Internet –
an ADSL line does that for you. Like most of the rest of the PPC team,
I’ve had the free version of Zone Alarm installed for quite some time,
but I very recently upgraded to the paid-for Zone Alarm Pro. My reasons
were simple – I use Microsoft’s Internet Connection Sharing to give
Internet access to the other machines on my Local Area Network, and the
Pro version of ZA handles that extremely well. So it sits on the gateway
machine, while the others on the LAN use the free version as a sort of
back-stop.
I wanted to know just how well this system was working,
so I navigated my way to
www.grc.com where two tools are available – Leak-proof and
Shields Up! – which I wanted to run against my PC.
Shields Up!
Shields Up! bombards your PC with all manner of port
scans to check for holes it can gain access by. It reports to you via
the web page you call it from, and lets you know exactly how secure it
thinks you are – how well your firewall is working. No matter which one
you use, I’d strongly suggest that you give Shields Up! a try. You may
get a nasty surprise, especially if you’ve paid good money for a certain
well-known make of firewall. ( and you won't if you're using
Zone Alarm
Leak-proof
Of more concern than port scanning, though, is Trojan
planting. There are Trojans about that will do their level best to
“phone home” carrying vital information back to whoever wrote (or
adapted) them. This kind of nasty is the mechanism by which all the
Distributed Denial of Service (DDOS) attacks have happened. What
Leak-proof does is to check whether a malicious piece of code can make a
connection from your machine back to its homeland. Again, it’s very well
worth the few minutes it will take for you to download a small
executable and run it – and again, you may be aghast at the results you
see (and again,
Zone Alarm comes out clean as a whistle).
As it happens, on Full Security settings, my own PC (and
LAN) are reported as being impregnable, and even on Medium Security (the
level which you need to be set at or below for AOL use) nothing can get
out, and port scans are secured against – that’s with both Zone Alarm
Pro and Zone Alarm (the free version).
Indeed, at Full security level, no other machine on the
Internet would be able to get my IP address to scan for ports- to all
intents and purposes, no-one else can see that it exists.
Conclusion
Even as I’m sitting writing this, I’m being scanned –
Zone Alarm Pro keeps popping up a message to let me know this. That’s
because I’ve spent some time at all three security settings, so my
(fixed) IP address could (and obviously has) already been seen by a
Script Kiddy out there, and they’re nothing if not dogged in their
determination to get into someone else’s machine. The mere fact that ZA
keeps blocking the scans makes me feel better, and the fact that I’ve
checked out how well it’s working makes me feel better still.
So here’s what I suggest you do.
Click here
to get to www.grc.com
and give your machine the two-part check I gave mine.
Now, that won’t stop all email-borne viruses and Trojans
from entering your machine – click
here and
here for our advice on that – but it will make sure that you’re a
very large step nearer being totally safe than you were before. And if
you're running Internet Connection Sharing, I'd strongly advise you buy
Zone Alarm Pro, as well.
Hopefully, by following all this advice, you’ll be as
safe as houses – and I say we’ve got an awful lot to thank those boys at
both Zone Labs and
GRC for.