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Your Home Network Security with Windows XP Service Pack 2 If you have more than one computer
connected at home, then you have a home network. Home networks make it
easier to share Internet access, files, printers, and more. Unfortunately,
networks also make it easier for hackers, viruses, and worms to intrude on
your privacy. Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP2) contains a number of
improvements that help protect your security, especially on a home network.
Read on to find out more about how your new or existing home network will be
protected.
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Windows Firewall will be turned on for
all network connections. This helps protect your computer against
security threats, such as intruders who might try to access your computer
over the Internet or a network. You might have to adjust Windows Firewall
settings for some programs, such as games, to allow some features to work
properly. For more information, read
Understanding Windows Firewall.www.tartoos.com
You might need to create exceptions to
the firewall protection. By default, only the Files and Settings
Transfer Wizard and File and Printer Sharing features are allowed to accept
unsolicited communications with the Internet. If any of your programs do not
run the same with Windows Firewall turned on, you can add them to the
exceptions list. For detailed instructions, see
Understanding Windows Firewall: Using the Exceptions Tab.
About printer notifications. If
Windows Firewall is turned on, information about a printer, such as "Ready"
or "Paused," in the Printers and Faxes folder, will not appear immediately
(but it will appear soon), and your computer will not receive notifications
(such as "print job completed" or "printer out of paper") from your printer.
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To access printers from other
computers on your home network, configure file and printer sharing. If
Windows Firewall is enabled on the computer to which your printer is
connected, and the file and printer sharing ports on the Exceptions
tab of Windows Firewall are not selected, other computers on your network
will not be able to connect to that computer to use the printer. To learn
more, see
Understanding Windows Firewall: Using the Exceptions Tab.
Most home networks don’t need to use a
network bridge. A network bridge joins two network segments so that they
act as one unified network. It can also compromise your network security.
For that reason, SP2 turns automatic bridging off. If you have a mixed
network (for example, wired and wireless), you might want to set up a
network bridge to connect the two parts of your network.
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Using an Internet gateway device is
recommended, rather than Internet Connection Sharing (ICS). An Internet
gateway device is a piece of hardware that you buy at a computer store. This
is also sometimes called a router, a base station, or a residential gateway.
Your network connects to the Internet through this device. |