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E3 Security Kit

The Wild Claims And Warnings


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Are you, as a PC/Windows user, at risk? Answer the following questions below to find out.

Something to hide?

Only you know the answer to this question. Gratefully, most things are legal in most enlightened countries. But it's not always a question of legality. You might have proprietary information you don't want anyone else to see; you might resent the fact that Microsoft Windows XP is regularly 'phoning home' with information about your computer and what other software you are using.

If you are worried your employer is going to find out how you spend your online time, think instead of your LAN proxy and the likelihood all traffic from your office is monitored, and that using 'rainmaker' tools will set off warning lights long before anything else will.

Is it hidden?

It's been a widely circulated fact ever since the first days of the public career of Peter Norton: Deleting files does not delete them. All your file system does is remove the references - the data itself remains intact, at least for a while. Peter Norton's Unerase program showed how easy it was to recover files that were supposedly deleted. So no, it's not going to be hidden.

The Windows PC has other areas where data can be stored. At the end of the day it's all on the hard drive, but different methods must be used to get at this data. Windows PCs have, in addition to ordinary disk storage, their Registry and their INI files.

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