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Virus
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Greetings from
Polar's E-Connections Team
We think
you'll find the information contained in this newsletter to be a valuable
tool for enhancing your Internet experience. If, however, you'd prefer not to
receive these bulletins on a monthly basis, click HERE. |
Virus News Flash - Microsoft Corp.'s Bounty Program Snags Author Of
Sasser Worm
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In November 2003,
Microsoft Corp. launched an Anti-virus Reward Program, (initially funding it
with five million dollars) to be used as bounty money for people who offered
information leading to the arrest and conviction of creators of e-mail viruses
and worms. Well, apparently money talks.
Last month, informants tipped off Microsoft officials in Germany with the name
of the author of the Sasser worm. Microsoft Corp. then worked with the U.S.
Federal Bureau of Investigations, the U.S. Secret Service and German officials.
The end result? Less than a week after the release of the Sasser worm, German
authorities arrested an eighteen-year-old high school student suspect, named
Sven Jaschan, who lives at home with his parents near the small German hamlet
of Rotenburg. (Not surprisingly, he was sitting at his computer at the time of
the arrest.) Jaschan confessed to German officials that he did in fact create
the Sasser worm along with its four variants. Investigators said Jaschan's
confiscated computer contained source code from the Sasser worm.
Additionally, authorities believe Jaschan to also be the author of the Netsky
worm (and its 28 variants) which was released in February 2004. One of the
latest Netsky variants stated in its source code, in part, "Hey AV
(anti-virus) firms, do you know that we have programmed the Sasser virus?!?
Yeah, that's true ..."
Jaschan is being investigated on suspicion of computer sabotage, which carries
a maximum sentence of five years in prison.
The Sasser worm attacks Windows 2000 and Windows XP machines through the port
vulnerability discussed in Microsoft's Security Bulletin it posted on its
website back on April 13, 2004. If you run either Windows 2000 or Windows XP on
your computer and have yet to download this free security patch, do so
immediately at:
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS04-011.mspx
Symptoms of an infection include the continual crashing and rebooting of your
computer system. If you believe that the Sasser worm has already infected your
computer, go to the following Microsoft web page for assistance:
http://www.microsoft.com/security/incident/sasser.asp
A note of irony -- The mother of the eighteen-year-old high school student
suspect runs a computer store in the small town of Waffensen, Germany. No doubt
he was sent to bed early without supper.
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From now until June 30,
2004, sign up for Polar High Speed Internet with no installation fee!
That's a savings of $125! It's the perfect time to go broadband - or to
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can get a fast connection that is always on. Call Polar to find out how you can
get High Speed Internet with FREE INSTALLATION today at 284-7221 or
1-800-284-7221 or go to www.thinkpolar.com.
Ask The Help Desk - How Do I Print Only Sections Of Pages
Rather Than Entire Documents?
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Question: I wanted to print a hard copy
of a tutorial for future reference from an eNewsletter. When I've attempted to
do this, I not only got the tutorial section but the entire eNewsletter as
well. I only want the tutorial section printed off. Can you help me?
Answer: There are two ways to avoid printing the entire newsletter.
First, select the text or area you want to print by highlighting it. (Click
where you want to start and, while holding the left mouse button down, drag
your cursor to where you want the selection to end, then release the mouse
button. The selected text will have a different background color.) Press the
"Print" button on the Outlook Express tool bar. When the
"Print" dialog box appears, look for the "Page Range" area.
There will be three choices. Click on "Selection" and then click on
the "Print" button. The highlighted text will be printed.
If your system doesn't have this option, simply highlight the section you want
to print, copy the text out of the newsletter (by choosing "Copy"
from the Edit drop-down menu), and then paste the text (by choosing
"Paste" from the Edit drop-down menu) into some sort of word
processing document (i.e. Word, AppleWorks, etc.). Then just print that page.
Great Sites To Check Out
This Month
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Lewis And Clark
Expedition Bicentennial Celebration
http://www.lewisandclark200.gov/ -
This year marks the 200th anniversary of the historic Lewis and Clark
Expedition. This site is the result of a collaborative effort of 32 federal
agencies and organizations. Cumulatively, the information provides insightful
details (journals, timelines, maps, letters, bios, etc.) on the expedition's
quest to find the best water portage solution between the heads of the Missouri
River in the east and the Pacific Ocean to the west.
Video Game Ratings And Overviews
http://esrb.org/ - The Entertainment
Software Rating Board (ESRB) is a self-regulatory body for the interactive
entertainment software industry. The ESRB ratings not only suggest age
appropriateness of specific video games but also "content
descriptors" that indicate elements of a game that may trigger a particular
rating, i.e. violence, suggestive themes, blood, etc. Ratings and corresponding
symbols encompass everything from Early Childhood (EC) to Everyone (E) to Teen
(T) to Mature (M) to Adults Only (AO). ESRB.org helps parents get a clearer
understanding of the products they might buy for their children as well as
providing a "prescreening" method of online interactive games. Simply
type in the name of the game or the name of the video publisher into the site's
search engine to get specific rating information.
Unique Family Vacation Attractions
http://roadsideamerica.com/ -
Are you looking for some unique tourist destinations to visit during your
family vacation this summer? We've got the perfect site for you! RoadsideAmerica.com
is "your online guide to offbeat attractions" across the U.S.,
Canada, and Mexico. The site includes over 400 pages of information on such
major vacation attractions as "The World's Largest Tire" (located in
Allen Park, Michigan), "The World's Largest Mallard Duck" (located in
Andrew, Alberta), "The World's Largest Charcoal Grill" (located in
Magnolia, Arkansas), "The World's Largest Axe" (located in Nackawic,
New Brunswick), and, of course, the ever popular "The World's Largest Ball
of Twine" (located where else but in Cawker City, Kansas). Ahhh, there's
nothing quite like building those family vacation memories.
Garfield Hits The Silver Screen
http://garfieldmovie.com/main.html -
He's got priorities: Eat, sleep and then eat again - - and now he's got his
very own movie. The June 11th release of Garfield The Movie marks the
first feature film for this popular comic strip feline. (Garfield is syndicated
in over 2,600 newspapers worldwide.) Bill Murray provides the voice for
Garfield. Jennifer Love Hewitt plays Dr. Liz Wilson and Breckin Meyer plays Jon
Arbuckle. The official site offers many trailers, games, production
information, e-cards, and more.
Wimbledon Championships: June 21st - July 4th
http://wimbledon.org/en_GB/index.html -
The All England Croquet and Lawn Tennis Club has been hosting the Lawn Tennis
Championships at Wimbledon almost every year since 1877. (Championships were not
held during World War I and World War II.) What started out as a garden party
atmosphere attended by only a few hundred spectators, now attracts over 500,000
fans each year, not to mention the millions across the globe watching on
television. The Club's official site is filled with history, statistics,
stories, ticket and accommodation information, vintage photography, and virtual
tours.
Short Tutorial - Switching E-mail Messages From
HTML-Based To Text-Based
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The default setting on
most e-mail software programs is to show e-mail messages in HTML format. In
this format, text within the message may appear in various colors;
it can be underlined, italicized, or in bold print; and it
can be changed to various sizes and fonts. When multiple users amend a
forwarded e-mail message, each with their own "style" of font, type
size, colors, etc., the results can be quite dysfunctional.
A simple method of cleaning up a messy message like this prior to forwarding it
to others is to switch the e-mail software's settings to a text-based e-mail
rather than an html-based e-mail. This converts all of the text within the
message to a single uniform text standard. Here's how:
Outlook Express for Windows
Outlook
Express for Mac OS 9 and Entourage for Mac OS X
Netscape
7x for Windows
Eudora
6.1 for Windows or Mac
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We hope you found this newsletter to be informative. It's
our way of keeping you posted on the happenings at our shop. If, however, you'd
prefer not to receive these bulletins on a monthly basis, click HERE.
Thanks for your business!
Best regards,
The E-Connections
Team
Polar E-Connections
(We have used our best efforts in collecting and preparing the information
published herein. However, we do not assume, and hereby disclaim, any and all
liability for any loss or damage caused by errors or omissions, whether such
errors or omissions resulted from negligence, accident, or other causes.)
©2004 Cornerstone Publishing Group Inc.
Trademarks: All brand names and product names used in this eNewsletter are
trade names, service marks, trademarks or registered trademarks of their
respective owners.