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Thursday, 31 December 2009
Monday, 7 December 2009
Viruses, worms, and Trojan horses are programs created by hackers that use the Internet to infect vulnerable computers. Viruses and worms can replicate themselves from computer to computer, while Trojan horses enter a computer by hiding inside an apparently legitimate program, such as a screen saver. Destructive viruses, worms, and Trojan horses can erase information from your hard disk or completely disable your computer. Others don't cause direct damage, but worsen your computer's performance and stability.
Sunday, 6 September 2009
Girls playing Holi Maza
Notify me when Windows Firewall blocks a new program
If you select this check box, Windows Firewall will inform you when it blocks a new program and give you the option of unblocking that program.
Turn off Windows Firewall (not recommended)
Avoid using this setting unless you have another firewall running on your computer. Turning off Windows Firewall might make your computer (and your network, if you have one) more vulnerable to damage from hackers and malicious software.
Notes
If some firewall settings are unavailable and your computer is connected to a domain, your system administrator might be controlling these settings through Group Policy.
To turn Windows Firewall on or off, see Turn Windows Firewall on or off.
New Maza For you
The standard account can help protect your computer by preventing users from making changes that affect everyone who uses the computer, such as deleting files that are required for the computer to work. We recommend creating a standard account for each user.
When you are logged on to Windows with a standard account, you can do almost anything that you can do with an administrator account, but if you want to do something that affects other users of the computer, such as installing software or changing security settings, Windows might ask you to provide a password for an administrator account.
Monday, 1 June 2009
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