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Firewall

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Guard Your Network With a Free Firewall

Need robust protection on a nonexistent budget? Try this open-source option.

IF YOU EVER find yourself in need of a decently robust and full-featured firewall but your budget is approaching zero, I have just the solution for you. SmoothWall Express 3.0 is an opensource, security-hardened GNU/Linux firewall. With minimal hardware requirements and a small footprint, it should work with nearly any Pentium-class PC that has at least 128MB of RAM and a hard disk of 2GB or greater. You should have at least two network cards installed for basic use—three or more if you want to incorporate a wireless network or to have a DMZ (a demilitarized zone, or a host that serves as a buffer between your private network and the outside). Keep in mind, though, that your firewall’s reliability is limited by the hardware on which you install it.


Installing SmoothWall
Don’t worry if you don’t know much about Linux. Though the geeky can get down and dirty at the command line, Smooth- Wall is easy to install and configure. It’s meant to be managed via an integrated Web interface, as well. To install, first download the 81MB ISO file at find. pcworld.com/63892 and burn it to a CD. If you need disk-burning software, try Img-Burn (find.pcworld.com/61194). Boot to the CD and run the installer, which will wipe the hard disk before it installs. Accepting the installer’s defaults is a good start. The fi rst “hard” question involves the security policy for outgoing requests. The default is Half-Open, which permits outgoing traffic except for any that is potentially harmful. You may also choose Open, which doesn’t limit outgoing traffic, or Closed, which requires that you configure what traffic is permitted.

You then need to configure your network interfaces, which will be labeled Green, Red, Orange, or Purple. The Green interface is your trusted LAN. Red is the evil and dangerous Internet. Orange is your DMZ, and Purple is your wireless LAN. Next you select which network card to assign to each role. SmoothWall will probe for and detect most cards. You’ll need to specify IP configuration, and optionally the DNS and gateway settings. You may also configure Web proxy, ISDN, ADSL, and DHCP. Lastly, you need to set a Web-interface password and a root password for command-line access. You’re done with setup. From here you can leave your “Smoothie” as is, and it behaves as a fully functional firewall. However, you can configure the most indepth features only through the Web interface. Point your browser to https://SmoothWallGreenAddress:441 and enter the admin password you made earlier.

For a free product, SmoothWall is remarkably full featured, including proxy servers, IDS, logging, traffi c graphs, DHCP, VPN, dynamic DNS, port forwarding, server health, and access control. It also provides an interface for backing up and restoring your configuration, so when your Pentium II PC kicks the bucket, you can get SmoothWall up and running again. SmoothWall Express is limited to a single CPU and 1GB of RAM, but that’s not likely to be an issue for even a network with a couple hundred users. The real limitation is the lack of support: While you can consult the robust user community, you’re mostly on your own. Of course, the commercial arm of SmoothWall sells paid and supported products, too.


Source of Information : PC World December 2009

Written by magakos on January 3rd, 2010 with no comments.
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Stop Windows from notifying you of security problems

You can stop Windows from notifying you of security problems on your computer. Windows is set up to automatically notify you about potential problems that may put your computer at risk.

For…

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Written by FireFly on September 4th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on otherSoftware and Notification and antivirus and update and Windows XP and Firewall and Security.

Vista Tips - Enabling the outbound firewall

In Windows Vista, Microsoft decided it was best to disable the outbound connection filtering because it can cause headaches for many inexperienced computer users. This may have been the right choice but not filtering your outbound traffic can increase the possibility that an application can steal important personal information and send it to a remote computer. If this application is malicious, it can be used to steal personal information such as passwords and bank account numbers.
Turning on the outbound firewall filtering and enabling only the rules that grant your normal applications access to the Internet will greatly increase the security of your computer.
Enabling the outbound firewall rules on your computer is easy to do once you know where Microsoft hid the setting.
Follow these steps to turn the outbound firewall back on:
  1. If the Windows Firewall with Advanced Security window is not already open, click the Start button, type wf.msc in the Search box, and then press Enter.
  2. When the firewall configuration tool is loaded, click Windows Firewall Properties right in the middle of the opening screen.
  3. When the settings window loads, you will see a tab for each of the different firewall profiles. Select the tab for the profile on which you would like to enable outbound filtering.
  4. Under the State section, locate the Outbound connections drop-down box and change it to Block.
  5. Click OK when you are finished to activate the outbound firewall on the profile you specified.
Windows automatically detects any applications that try to access the Internet or other network resources that are now blocked with the outbound firewall turned on and will prompt you to automatically authorize the application to send information out to the Internet.

Written by FireFly on June 12th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on windows tips and otherSoftware and Firewall and Tips and Windows Vista.

Manual Removal of W32/Kolabc.FIA Worm

Manual Removal of W32/Kolabc.FIA Worm
W32/OnLineGames.TJEI is a trojan. The trojan will infect Windows systems.
This Worm Copies its files to Windows\System Folder as hidden files.
This trojan information updated on April 22, 2009.
Other names of W32/OnLineGames.TJEI Trojan:
This trojan is also known as Trojan-GameThief.Win32.OnLineGames.tjei, Worm:Win32/Taterf.B, PSW.OnlineGames_r.K.
Damage Level : Medium/High
Distribution Level:
Medium
W32/Kolabc.FIA Worm Manual Removal Instructions
Recommend Removal from Safe Mode:

How to Start in Safe mode:
Restart your Computer, Press F8 Repeatedly, when your Screen turns on, Select Safe mode, press enter.
The Infected Files Can be Seen in these folders and names also Running in Tasks
End the Following Active Process Before Removal
  • [ Kill the Process, Use Killbox if your Access Denied ]
Download W32/Kolabc.FIA Worm Known File Removal Tool

[In Windows Vista Run As Administrator, After Execution System Will Restart]

  • %Windows\System\firewall.exe
    [ No Exact Information about Files, search above related files in Program files Folder ]
    If you have any of these files in running process from task manger, end the process before removal.
    Note: if task manager is disabled, Download the following file, Click to Download - Enable Registry.reg [ Right Click - Save Target As/Linked Content As ]
    Open it with Regedit.exe [%system32\regedit.exe], then it Confirms Add to registry Yes or No, Confirm Yes, then click Ok.
W32/Kolabc.FIA Worm Entries Manual Removal From Registry
Click Start, Run,Type regedit,Click OK.

Note: If the registry editor fails to open the threat may have modified the registry to prevent access to the registry editor.
  • Download this UnHookExec.inf, [ Right Click - Save Target As/Linked Content As ]
    and then continue with the removal. Save it to your Windows desktop. Do not run it at this time, download it only.
  • After booting into the Safe Mode or VGA Mode
  • Right-click the UnHookExec.inf file and click Install. [This is a small file. It does not display any notice or boxes when you run it.]
The W32/Kolabc.FIA Worm modifies registry at the following locations to ensure its automatic execution at every system startup:
Delete The Entries
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run

Delete file entries from right side
Search Registry For W32/Kolabc.FIA Worm File Names listed above to remove completely,
Edit Menu - Find
, enter Keyword and remove all value that find in search.

Exit the Registry Editor,
Restart your Computer.

Recommended Removal Tools:
Kaspersky Antivirus or Internet Security (Shareware)
Spyware Doctor (Shareware)
AVG Antivirus (Freeware)
Killbox (Freeware)
Ultimate Links PC Tips

Written by FireFly on April 29th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on worm removal and firewall.exe and manual removal and otherSoftware and Firewall and Windows.

Vista Compatible Firewalls

Free
  • Windows Firewall (Windows Vista Firewall is part of Windows operating system and includes both inbound and outbound protection) (32 and 64 Bit)
Free and Full Feature Pay Versions
Pay Versions

Compiled from data provided by Matousec

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Written by Corrine on October 12th, 2008 with 2 comments.
Read more articles on Firewall and otherSoftware and vista and Microsoft and Security and Windows Vista.

Windows Vista File and Printer Sharing Ports

When you enable file and printer sharing in Windows Vista it automatically opens the ports needed to share files or printer in the Windows Vista firewall for you.

What if you’re not using the Windows Vista firewall or you’re using a hardware firewall like a router, firewall appliance, Linux firewall, or a Cisco PIX?

Below is a table that lists all the ports that need to be opened in Windows Vista to share files and printers. You can manually open these ports to enable file and printer sharing on your computer. (more…)

Written by Jason on January 5th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on printer sharing and otherSoftware and TCP and UDP and Network and Firewall and Hardware and Computer and computer and Windows Vista.

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