How to Avoid Website Hackers, and What to Do When Hacked

 Here's a dirty trick that's happening to more and more businesses each day. Your company homepage gets hacked and is injected with a malicious code designed to install on a visitor's browser. Google and other search engines then list your website as dangerous, and people visiting your website are experience warnings from their browsers, spam blockers, and anti-virus applications. Essentially, your online business is toast. And now you are open to liability if anyone had recently visited your website and can prove your website infected their system. Maybe your small business has hundreds of computers across multiple locations. Now you will have to worry if any of these computers have been infected. And in some cases the only way to make 100% sure that the infection has been removed is to do a complete reinstall of the operating system. Types of Infection Most of these infections are activated by a link that launches when an infected website is visited, unpacking a Java Script and a 'Password Key Encryptor' on the hosts' website browser. The first question most businesses ask is "how in the heck did this happen!" Here are some reasons: 1) Direct server hacking into your hosting server.  

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