November 25, 2010

:: don't n do::

SALAM

hari nie keje memang sangat memboringkan.. bukan tak de keje, ada keje..macam-macam keje yang kene wat..dari menaip surat, serve makanan, buat air..memang multitasking la..bukan multitasking dah..bertriple2 tasking..huuuu..bila dah boring, tadi aku ada la baca n isi masa ngan baca READER'S DIGEST..dapat free pon.. kalu tak..tak de la ak buku tersebut..tu pon dapat free..hahaha.. bila-bila dah belek-belek n baca content dlm tu, terbaca plak satu artikel nie..artikel ni memang bagus giler aku cakap..sebabnye banyak kottt point dalam tu.. tolong baca artikel di bawah untuk mem'PROTECT' diri masing-masing dari PENGGODAM yang tidak BERWIBAWA..nie semua adalah untuk keselamatan kita bersama.. RENUNG-RENUNGKAN.. dan tolong la PRACTICE..

DON'T
  1. use passwords or user IDs that include personal information like your birth date or social security number.
  2. use your mother's maiden name as a security question. Pick something more obscure, like your childhood pet's name.
  3. leave passwords in plain view - on your monitor, for example.
  4. use the same password for multiple sites. If crooks crack your Twitter account, they can access your bank account too.
DO
  1. create passwords that are at least eight to 16 characters long, with mix of capital letters, numbers, and symbols.They're harder to crack.
  2. use random pattern codes to create passwords. For example, pick two computer keys - say, 4 and 7. Type straight down the keyboard from 4 until you reach the bottom (the letter V), then type one character to the left. then do the same for 7, this time using all caps. you now have a meaningless but strong password that reads 4rfvc7UJMN, but all you have to remember is 47. Or use the first letter of each word in a line from a favourite song or poem.
  3. change passwords often, about once a month.
  4. hold your cursor over an unknown link before clicking on it, and look at the bottom of your web browser. it will show where the link is actually taking you to.
  5. note the wording before the last period of a URL (just to the left of.com,.org,.edu, etc.). it's what counts. so paypal.1234.com is fake.
  6. look out for links with the @ symbol. browsers ignore everything to the left of it, so paypal@1234.com is not a PayPal site.
  7. watch for deliberate misspellings - like paypal.com - designed to trick you into clicking.

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