The PrivacyHarbor Blog

Staying Safe Online This Holiday Season

December 8th, 2009 by Ken Diamond

The holiday season has arrived, which for many families means it’s time to pull out the seasonal food recipes, prepare for a visit from the in-laws, and keep an eye out for the biggest holiday discounts. But one important task often overlooked by families during this busy time of year is to create an online safety checklist.

Before you make your next online gift purchase or update your social media profile, make sure you are aware of the following safety tips, geared to help protect the privacy and security of you and your family:

Online Purchases

  • Never buy gifts from websites that do not have SSL encryption. If your web browser doesn’t display a lock icon at the bottom of the window when you visit a website, then that website may not secure your credit card information.
  • Be sure to use and update existing firewall and anti-virus software to prevent website cookies, viruses and spyware from damaging your computer or exposing your personal files.
  • There are a number of fake holiday e-card and song lyric websites, phony seasonal discount web pages, as well as various email scams that show up during the holidays. Make sure to research the legitimacy of each organization before making your purchase or donation. McAfee recently released an article covering the “12 Scams of Christmas” that offers additional advice on what to look out for online this holiday season.

Social Media Websites

  • It may be tempting to provide your friends and family with constant updates over Twitter and Facebook about your holiday activities and when you’ll be away on vacation; however, publicly posted personal information can help thieves determine the best methods to break into your online accounts or even your home.
  • When updating your social media profiles for the holidays, it is a good idea to avoid posting potentially inappropriate or explicit photos that might hurt your chances of getting a new job or promotion (sometimes too much peppermint schnapps and a cell phone camera is not the best combination).
  • Avoid clicking on shortened or masked URLs posted in social media status updates, blogs, forums and chat rooms, unless the post comes from a trusted source and is free from spam-related content.

Email Privacy

  • Never include private information such as passwords, social security numbers or credit card information in emails sent through common webmail providers. These emails often pass through several unsecure web servers, exposing your private information to hackers, spammers and identity thieves.
  • When going on vacation, avoid setting up auto-rely email messages for your personal email account that might alert robbers that you are out of town.
  • Avoid opening emails from any sender you don’t recognize, even if they appear to represent a legitimate organization. Many phishing schemes involve emails that ask you to “login” to your account to take part in a holiday offer or to verify sensitive account information.  In many cases, the links in these emails send you to a fake login page designed to steal your credit card number and personal information. If are unsure whether the email you received came from a legitimate representative, call the organization directly to confirm.

PrivacyHarbor.com provides a  private email service that prevents spam, scams, viruses and identity thieves from ever entering your inbox, which will help keep you and your family safe this holiday season. Purchase a PrivacyHarbor.com yearly or lifetime private email account through the month of December and we will donate 5 percent of your purchase to the Toys for Tots Foundation.

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8 Responses to “Staying Safe Online This Holiday Season”

  1. Carl Jorgensen says on :

    Also worth noting that fraud on a credit card is much easier to clean up than fraud charges on a debit card. Since debit cards take real money in real time from an account, banks can difficult.

  2. Kathleen Greenhaw says on :

    I agree. This happened to me where a company handling the transfer of my rent money over to my Apartment manager’s bank account accidentally sent my rent into their account 3 times instead of just processing it once which put my bank account in the red and made it so any other checks I wrote around the same time bounced. I was furious and it took A LOT longer than expected to get my bank to correct the error. If this happens to someone due to fraud rather than a computer error then it could take even longer to correct so watch out.

  3. Grady Voccia says on :

    Quite normal you’ve provided some great insight. Been lurking on the website for a little bit and wanted to give thanks to you for taking a few minutes to post it.

  4. Merle Mantik says on :

    I dispise the phishing emails they appear to get more desperate by the day I get two or three everyday and submit them to phishtrackers a site I recently found that allows you to report them anonymously.

  5. Admin says on :

    On 5/19/2010 you said: “I despise the phishing emails they appear to get more desperate by the day I get two or three everyday and submit them to phish-trackers a site I recently found that allows you to report them anonymously.” If everyone would do that it would help us all. Our business is predicated upon protecting privacy as a “right”. Thank you and please send any other helpful tips or ideas like this.

  6. Del Libman says on :

    I am much thankful for the great wordpress blog. I like your blog. I probably make a link from my site. diet expert

  7. gas bbq says on :

    Hi from Russia! Am i allowed to quote a post in your blog using the link to you? I’ve tried contacting you regarding this problem however it appears i cant reach you, please reply when have a time, thanks.

  8. Admin says on :

    We have been moving offices lately and not being all that diligent administering this blog. Not a problem linking to our site or even our ThePrivacyMovement.org site which is still being worked on.

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