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New TargetsHow Safe Is Your Webmail Account?By Kim Boatman Clay Blackham seldom used his free Hotmail account. So by the time he noticed his account had been hacked, the hacker was running up bids on Blackham’s eBay account. “It was tied directly to my Hotmail account,” explains Blackham, partner in a public relations firm in Sandy, Utah, a Salt Lake City suburb. “All that person needed to do was click on ‘forgot password’ from eBay.” It took Blackham a couple of weeks to figure out how to reset his Hotmail password -- but far less to learn a valuable lesson or two. Many of us are flocking to free email accounts from Yahoo, Google and other providers. These so-called “webmail’’ accounts offer the flexibility of checking your email from any computer with Internet access and the convenience of keeping the same email address even if you change Internet providers. But a recent spate of security issues has raised concerns about webmail accounts. Most famously, former Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin’s webmail account was hacked during the campaign. If you use webmail, a number of precautions can help keep your account and your information secure, say security experts. “Most people think this stuff is kind of magical, that the computer gods are making sure they’re protected,’’ says Robert Siciliano, a Boston-based identity theft expert. “The reality is you need to know what your responsibilities are to make sure you are protected.” Here are some precautions experts recommend:
An alpha-numeric password -- a series of letters and numbers -- works best, say the experts. Now, here’s the tricky part. Once you create a strong password, you need to remember it. Writing it down somewhere is a recipe for trouble, say the experts. Work to make your alpha-numeric memorable in some way.
Don’t rely on your free account as the sole repository of critical information. Notenboom once heard from a graduate student who had kept his master’s thesis on his Hotmail account. “When he lost his account, for reasons which were never clear, he lost all of his work,” says Notenboom. “Years of research gone in an instant. Something as simple as a backup of the document or the account would have saved him his degree. “I hear regularly from people who’ve lost treasured messages, contacts, photos and more due to issues around their free email accounts.” You may utilize free email accounts and other web-based technologies for the sake of convenience. But it’s important to monitor your critical information, says Siciliano. Keep watch on your credit card statement, monitor your credit reports and regularly run anti-virus software on your computer -- and keep the software updated, advises Siciliano. “Ultimately, you need to make sure you are not the path of least resistance,” he says. Kim Boatman is a Silicon Valley, Calif., journalist who writes about security and technology. She spent more than 15 years writing about a variety of topics for the San Jose Mercury News. More FeaturesSymantec Security CheckTest your computer's exposure to online security threats and learn how to make your computer more secure. TestSymantec Tools
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