Secure Browsing Habits That Protect You From Web-Based Attacks
Derek H.
The Web Is a Threat Landscape
Your web browser is your primary interface with the internet and, consequently, your primary exposure to web-based threats. Drive-by downloads, malicious advertisements, compromised legitimate websites, and credential-harvesting forms all exploit the browser as an attack vector. Good browsing habits significantly reduce your risk.
Verify Before You Click
Always check the URL before entering credentials. Look for the correct domain name - attackers use lookalike domains like "g00gle.com" or "microsoft-login.net". Bookmark frequently accessed sites and use those bookmarks rather than following links in emails. When a site asks for unexpected information, navigate to it directly rather than following the link you received.
Keep Everything Updated
Enable automatic updates for your browser. Browser updates frequently patch critical security vulnerabilities that attackers actively exploit. Update or remove plugins and extensions that you no longer use. Each outdated component is a potential vulnerability. Modern browsers auto-update by default, but verify this setting is active and that updates have not been disabled by group policy or configuration.
Use Built-in Security Features
Enable your browser's built-in protection features: Safe Browsing in Chromium-based browsers, Enhanced Tracking Protection in Firefox. Enable HTTPS-Only mode. Allow the browser to warn you about insecure downloads. Do not dismiss security warnings without understanding them - browsers display warnings for good reasons. The True Protection browser extension adds an additional layer of protection by checking URLs against our threat intelligence database in real time.