I've seen quite a few people recently splashing out money on VPN software and other premium computer security things. People seemed to be worried quite a lot about their online safety (rightly so), asking things like "Is my computer, my phone, are my Emails safe?" etc etc.
Those are all relative questions. Well what are the right questions? The right question to ask yourself is "Who am I safe or not safe from?".
I'm sure many of you consider your home safe, from burglars or otherwise (at least I would hope so). But that's all relative. Would the Secret Service consider it safe for the President? No, almost certainly not. Because the president of the United States is prone to both terrorist and military attacks, and you (at least I assume) are not.
Just because security professionals like the Secret Service consider your home un-safe, does that mean you should spend millions upgrading your house to have state of the art alarm systems, surveillance, look outs, body guards, a safe room and bullet proofing? No, it doesn't.
The same goes for your smartphone and home computer. Sure, it is highly advisable that you have a standard, up to date, virus protection software package. But do you really need VPN software, proxies, secure networks, and any other expensive security measures? Not unless you have something seriously important worth protecting.
So, then, if you're really considering purchasing some kind of computer security product for your home computer, other than anti-virus software - I would think twice, do you really need it?
That is for the average Joe, of course.
Those are all relative questions. Well what are the right questions? The right question to ask yourself is "Who am I safe or not safe from?".
I'm sure many of you consider your home safe, from burglars or otherwise (at least I would hope so). But that's all relative. Would the Secret Service consider it safe for the President? No, almost certainly not. Because the president of the United States is prone to both terrorist and military attacks, and you (at least I assume) are not.
Just because security professionals like the Secret Service consider your home un-safe, does that mean you should spend millions upgrading your house to have state of the art alarm systems, surveillance, look outs, body guards, a safe room and bullet proofing? No, it doesn't.
The same goes for your smartphone and home computer. Sure, it is highly advisable that you have a standard, up to date, virus protection software package. But do you really need VPN software, proxies, secure networks, and any other expensive security measures? Not unless you have something seriously important worth protecting.
So, then, if you're really considering purchasing some kind of computer security product for your home computer, other than anti-virus software - I would think twice, do you really need it?
That is for the average Joe, of course.
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