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Step 3                                                      Step 4

Use the Internet Safely
Unscrupulous websites, as well as pop-ups and animations, can be dangerous. Set rules about Internet usage to protect your business—and your employees. If your business doesn’t have a policy on Internet use, it should. Though the Web can be an incredibly useful workplace tool, it can also cause significant workplace havoc that can result in lost productivity. Setting some rules protects your business and your employees.

Why Your Business Is at Risk
Web pages contain programs that are usually innocent and sometimes helpful—for instance, animations and pop-up menus. But there are questionable, even malicious websites that have their own agenda, and it’s not always in your best interest to browse

them. When you’re surfing the Web, site operators can identify your computer on the Internet, tell which page you came from, use cookies to profile you, and install spy ware on your computer— all without your knowledge. Destructive worms can also enter your system through your Web browser.

Beyond malicious activities instigated by outsiders, businesses can be put in a vulnerable position by employees who engage in illegal or undesirable Web activity during work hours and on company-owned computers.

What Your Internet Policy Should Include
When creating a company-wide Internet-use policy, address the following issues:

• Whether employees are allowed to browse the Web for personal use as well as business purposes

• When employees can use the Web for personal use (for example, lunch hours, after hours)

• If and how the company monitors Web use and what level of privacy employees can expect

• Web activity that is not allowed. Spell out unacceptable behavior in detail. In many companies this behavior includes activities such as: - Offensive content downloads

- Threatening or violent behavior - Commercial solicitations (non-business related)

Other illegal activities
Provide two copies of the policy to employees—one for them to keep and another for them to sign and return to you. (For more information, see the section “Creating a Security policy,” later in this guide.) 

Tips for Safe Browsing
In addition to having a policy, the following recommendations can also help promote safe Web browsing:

• Go to trusted sites only.

• Don’t use work computers for idle browsing.

• Never browse websites from a server. Always use a desktop or laptop computer.

• Do not allow websites to install programs unless you trust the website and are sure of what the program does.

• Use a firewall or a router. Doing so allows you to filter Web addresses and block Internet traffic to and from dangerous sites.

• Consider Web-filtering software. Companies such as Web sense and Secure Computing offer products that filter Internet use based on a variety of criteria.

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