[ The PC Guide | System Care Guide | Data Loss and Virus
Prevention | Virus Detection and Protection | Virus Infection Mechanisms and Prevention ]
Infection Over PC Networks
Virus infection over PC networks are becoming an increasingly difficult problem. As
with any shared medium, a network provides the ability for users to share files, and where
files are shared, viruses can be shared. In practice, virus infection via local area
networks is still not that common; one simple reason is that boot sector viruses cannot be
readily spread via a network, and boot viruses are a large percentage of the really
difficult viruses out there.
There are a couple of things that you can do to minimize your chances of contracting a
virus over a local network:
- Control Your Connections: Carefully control who has access to your PC's local
hard disk. Put an access password on any shared resources that allow others to write to
your disk; don't just open up your disk to writing by anyone on the network. If possible,
set up your system so that write access to your disk is limited to a single directory or
directory structure. This makes it easy to scan for viruses in incoming files.
- Scanning: Make a habit of scanning all new possible virus-containing files
that are put on your PC over the network. This is easier if you limit the number of places
that new files can be placed on your machine (see above). Do not run any programs that are
placed into shared areas without scanning them first.
Next: Infection Via the Internet
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