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lowstatusmale's avatar
lowstatusmale
Neighbour
3 years ago
Solved

No Support for Hacking

I've been with Telus for a year now. For the first nine months, I did not have a stable internet connection. I had an incident at this point where I discovered the whole time I have been with Telus s...
  • HSL's avatar
    3 years ago

    End Point Security is your responsibility not Telus'. Telus provides Internet access which a) allows you to access "the internet" and b) allows "the internet" to access your devices if they are not well protected.

     

    The Telus hub in your residence has a firewall - turn it on and set it to "high".

     

    If you are a Windows user, your PC has a firewall and antivirus software builtin - make sure both are turned on and updated regularly.

     

    Ensure that the operating system software and any application software on *all* of your devices is current release and is updated regularly. Devices  that are no longer receiving software updates or are no longer being supported by the manufacturer should be discarded or replaced.

     

    The likelihood that you are being "hacked" is not very high. Most "hacking" is done by state actors targeting other states or industrial infrastructure. That being said, you may well have malware on one or more of your systems, but this type of software is not typically installed through brute force attacks. Rather it is installed through subterfuge .. by persuading you to download and/or install the malware yourself.  If that is the case then consider wiping your devices and doing a clean re-installation (back up your personal data if you can).