Usually, when Safer Internet Day comes around, the cybersecurity situation hasn’t changed much from the year before, so it doesn’t feel like much of a reason to do anything special.
But that’s not the case in 2021, thanks to the lifestyle changes that the coronavirus pandemic has brought around the world.
In the US, for example, the Wall Street Journal reported that internet usage increased 25% in just a few days in mid-March 2020.
On the other side of the Atlantic, Ofcom, the UK’s communication services regulator, reported that internet usage hit an all-time high in the year. By June 2020, Britons were, on average, spending more than a quarter of their waking hours online.
That’s hardly surprising.
For most of us, the internet has been a godsend over the last year. It’s enabled us to continue working, studying, shopping, socialising and being entertained when we couldn’t do it in person.
At the same time, however, the crooks have regularly exploited the health-related fears and anxieties of all of us – as home users, employees and employers – to lure us into their criminal traps.
With all this in mind, why not take advantage of SAFER INTERNET DAY 2021 to check your online security practices and make sure you, your family and your friends are as safe as possible?
1. IF YOU OWN A WEBSITE, MAKE SURE IT’S SECURE
For many small businesses in countries with strict lockdown, online sales are the only way to keep trade alive at all, due to “click-and-collect” regulations.
As a result, many small businesses have enabled online purchasing for the first time over the last year, with web developers reporting a rush to implement online payment mechanisms in the first months of the pandemic.
If your business has a website, even if it’s only a modest one, go back and review the security of the site and any payment collection services you work with or connect to.
If you can afford it, get a third-party to do the review so you get an independent opinion of what has been set up well, which parts could be improved, and which parts, if any, need urgent attention. (You can be sure that the crooks are regularly “testing” your server, even if you are not.)
If you are running a website via HTTP only, perhaps because the information you’re providing is public anyway and you don’t think it needs encrypting, please upgrade to HTTPS for the greater good of all.
If you don’t manage your own website, speak to your hosting service – any reputable provider will be happy to answer your questions, and won’t get in the way of an independent security assessment.
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2. IF YOU SHOP ONLINE, TAKE CARE BEFORE YOU SHARE
Read our 6 tips for online safety that we published over Thanksgiving weekend 2020 for the peak of the 2020 retail season known as Black Friday.
These tips apply all year round, and they’re easy to do.
From applying a credit freeze to using extra steps of authentication, we explain how to protect yourself from risk when you shop online.
3. EDUCATE YOUR FRIENDS AND FAMILY
Lots of occasional web users have become heavy consumers almost overnight. Many people who previously just used the internet to read the news or check emails are now using it in multiple ways every day, including for meeting up for chats with groups of people they don’t know well, if at all.
Talk with your friends and family about good online security practices. Advise them on how to spot scams no matter how they arrive.
Cybercriminals are taking advantage of people being at home to make predatory phone calls; are abusing home deliveries to send scams via SMS; and are taking advantage of people trying to download health advice or set up vaccine appointments.
Read the threat articles listed above and you will get an excellent idea of how cybercrooks think and operate, which makes it easier to outwit them.
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4. SECURE THE DEVICES YOU USE TO ACCESS THE INTERNET
Check out our tips for homeschooling. These tips are useful even if you don’t have children, because they explain how to stay safe now that most home networks have basically become small business networks in their own right.
Also check out our home Wi-Fi tips to help you lock down your network from outside snooping or surveillance.
Don’t wait until after something bad has happened to figure out how to protect against it!
Jeff
I read your “6 tips for online safety that we published over Thanksgiving weekend 2020” [Editor’s note: LINK IN ARTICLE ABOVE], where KGHN commented about using virtual credit card numbers. I use these all the time, through Citi Bank’s MasterCard. They’re very versatile, and once used, are locked to that vendor, so that for reoccurring charges (such as a cell phone bill), even if the vendor gets hacked, the card number can’t be used with any other vendor. You can optionally set a maximum dollar limit, and can set the number of months it’s valid for. You can also cancel the number at any time, so if used for a single purchase, if there’s any dollar value still available, it can be cancelled to avoid any risk of losing that money. You also get the added value of protection afforded with a credit card purchase. As KGHN noted, Bank of America used to offer this, but dropped it. Discover Card also offered it quite a while back, but dropped it too. I had used both, and switched to Citi, even though both BoA and Discover assured me that I would have zero fraud liability for on-line use of their cards. Why let someone commit fraud and have the cost (eventually paid by consumers, as it always is), when you can easily prevent the fraud?
Anubhab
The upgrade from HTTP to HTTPS guarantees users the data that gets transported from the user’s computer to the server. But for website security, webmasters need to be more careful to protect themselves from hacking.
Paul Ducklin
+1
An HTTPS certificate alone doesn’t make your server content trustworthy, any more than having a driving licence makes you a good driver. (But it’s a good start!)