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How to Know if You Have Spyware on Your Computer

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Do you think someone is spying on your internet activity? Though Norton or McAfee might be able to locate spyware, some may be so well-written as to escape detection. In any case, downloading more software willy-nilly in an attempt to protect your computer is more likely to make things worse. Here are some steps a Microsoft Windows user can take to detect spyware activity; Macintosh OS/X, Linux, and users of other operating systems will have similar but different methods available.

- Press Ctrl-Alt-Del (all 3 keys simultaneously, known as a “three-finger salute”). This should pop up the Task Manager, or whatever Microsoft is calling it lately. One of the tabs should be Processes; click that tab.

1) Look up every process name on the Internet. Don’t trust all the information that you find, but try to get a general consensus from the more reliable sites whether that process name is likely to be malevolent or not.

2) Even if a process name is normal and expected (like svchost.exe), it’s still possible that a “hacker” was able to overwrite the normal system process with a tainted one.

3) If a process looks suspicious, for example u-r-0wn3d.exe, you will need to attempt removal. See Tips for ideas on that process.

- Open a command window, also known as a “DOS box”, by clicking Start | Run | cmd, or Start | Run | command on older systems. Type in the command: netstat -an. This will show you a list of systems you have connected to, and systems connected to you, and all “listening” ports. Learn the port numbers: 80 and 443 are typical for the “web”; 135, 139, and 445 are for Microsoft networks; find out what they all mean. If you see something suspicious, netstat -anbv might show you what process is doing the communication.

Written by Admin

February 3rd, 2010 at 3:18 pm

Posted in Spyware

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