Why You Should Ignore This Advice

Written by Steve Shaw


Copyright © 2004 Steve Shaw

Doesn't make too much sense does it? Am I really going to give you some advice that asks you to ignorerepparttar advice I'm giving you? Well, that's not strictly true. I am however going to show you how to qualifyrepparttar 118697 advice you are given, so you can sortrepparttar 118698 wheat fromrepparttar 118699 chaff, and help you to surviverepparttar 118700 information overload onrepparttar 118701 Internet.

Firstly, you need to find out who is givingrepparttar 118702 advice. Are they speaking from a position of experience? Isrepparttar 118703 advice they are giving first-hand? Or is it second-hand advice, something they have heard somewhere else, have not put it into practice themselves, and are simply handing it onto you and presenting it as their own (and perhaps somewhat altered).

For example, if you read an article from someone on how to get more visitors to your web site, you need to ensure it is written by someone who has high traffic levels themselves. If you visit their web site, and discover it ranks somewhere below a million on Alexa, are they really someone you should be taking advice from on traffic? After all, would you take financial advice from someone who is bankrupt?

Ensure that if you get advice, it is coming from someone who knows what they are talking about from personal experience (and that you can see adequate proof).

10 Tips to Stay Safe and Secure Online

Written by Steve Robson


The Internet can be a dangerous place.

While you're enjoyingrepparttar convenience of online shopping, Internet banking and subscription websites, nasty people lurk around every corner.

Hackers, fraudsters, identity thieves and many others would love to get hold of your personal details.

And what stands between you and a security disaster?

Your password.

Just 8 little characters long, it's your last line of defense online. Here are 10 tips for choosing and using bullet-proof passwords that will protect you from harm:

Tip 1 - Avoidrepparttar 118696 obvious

Passwords based on personal details are too easy to guess. Avoid using names, places, favorite sports teams, or "password".

Tip 2 - Make it non-dictionary

One option a thief might try to crack your password is a brute-force dictionary attack. Choose something that you won't find in any dictionary.

Tip 3 - Userepparttar 118697 full 8 characters

The more characters a password containsrepparttar 118698 more secure it becomes, so fill that password field torepparttar 118699 max.

Tip 4 - Mixrepparttar 118700 case

Deter thieves further by using a combination of upper and lower-case letters. A mIXeD cAsE password adds another layer of protection and is ever harder to guess.

Cont'd on page 2 ==>
 
ImproveHomeLife.com © 2005
Terms of Use