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Overview of Internet Security
As of 1996, the Internet connected an estimated 13 million computers in 195
countries on every continent, even Antarctica (1). The Internet is not a single
network, but a worldwide collection of loosely connected networks that are
accessible by individual computer hosts in a variety of ways, including
gateways, routers, dial-up connections, and Internet service providers. The
Internet is easily accessible to anyone with a computer and a network
connection. Individuals and organizations worldwide can reach any point on the
network without regard to national or geographic boundaries or time of day.
However, along with the convenience and easy access to information come new
risks. Among them are the risks that valuable information will be lost, stolen,
corrupted, or misused and that the computer systems will be corrupted. If
information is recorded electronically and is available on networked computers,
it is more vulnerable than if the same information is printed on paper and
locked in a file cabinet. Intruders do not need to enter an office or home, and
may not even be in the same country. They can steal or tamper with information
without touching a piece of paper or a photocopier. They can create new
electronic files, run their own programs, and hide evidence of their
unauthorized activity
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