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Is it safe for me to use email or the
Internet to get help?
If someone has access to your email account, he or she may be able to
read your mail. If you believe your account is secure, make sure you
choose a password that he or she will not be able to guess. (For more
information, please refer to the information below.) If someone knows
how to access your computer's cache file (automatically saved web
pages and graphics), he or she may be able to see information you have
viewed recently on the Internet. Also, please be aware that there is
software available that covertly monitors a computer's every
keystroke, site viewed, and chat held via the Internet.
This page discusses how to safely use your email program and how to
empty the history/cache files on your computer.
If someone who is abusive to you has access to your computer, you may
want to call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-SAFE
(7233), TDD 1-800-787-3224 before emailing any organization.
Passwords
- Often when you enter passwords in
an email account or other accounts, the computer will ask you if you
want it to remember the password. If you are concerned that your
abuser may be trying to monitor your email activity, tell your
computer NOT to remember your passwords. Tell it no by making sure
the check box next to the question is not checked. If your computer
is remembering your password, your password is being stored
somewhere in the computer where your abuser may be able to find it.
- Choose passwords that are
difficult to guess. Do not write passwords down anywhere. Create
passwords using a random assortment of letters, numbers and symbols
(i.e. 1fr&3jk). If you must write something down, write a hint to
help you remember it, but not the password itself.
Address Book
If you are concerned that your abuser
may try to discover your email activity, do NOT enter sensitive
information into your electronic address book. This includes email
addresses of local shelters, advocates or other programs that you may
have contacted for assistance. If you do maintain an electronic
address book, containing the email addresses of friends and family, do
NOT fill in fields such as personal address, phone number,
organizational affiliation, etc.
If you are using Outlook Express or
Outlook as a mail program, consider disabling the feature that
automatically places the email address of someone you have replied to
in your Address Book.
To disable this feature, Go to Outlook Express:
- Click on Edit/Options/Send
- Uncheck the box beside
Automatically put people I reply to in my Address Book.
This will prevent your computer from
placing the email addresses of those people you reply to in your
Address Book.
Automatic Name Completion
Email programs often have a
functioncalled
automatic name completion, which automatically completes an
email address when the first few letters are typed. This may provide
your abuser with information about whom you have emailed. Keep in mind
that this feature utilizes information that is stored in your
electronic address book. While disabling the automatic name
completion feature will prevent your abuser from easily
discovering the recipients of your email, it will not prevent them
from obtaining this information by examining your electronic address
book.
Netscape Mail:
Follow this path to disable automatic
name completion when entering an email address into a new message:
- Click on Edit/Preferences/Mail &
Newsgroups/Addressing
- Uncheck the box beside Address
Books.
This will prevent your computer from
automatically entering email addresses into a new message.
Outlook - Follow this path to disable
the automatic
name completion feature when entering an email address in a new message:
- Click on Edit/Options/Send
- Uncheck the box beside
Automatically complete e-mail addresses when composing.
This will prevent your computer from
automatically entering email addresses into a new message.
Clearing Incoming and
Outgoing Email
If you want to keep your incoming or outgoing email messages
private consider changing the
settings of your email program to ensure that all messages are cleared
from the appropriate folders.
- Avoid saving a copy of outgoing
email in the Sent Items Folder. To change your email program
settings, follow this path:
Netscape
- Click on
Edit/Preferences/Mail & Newsgroups/Copies and Folders
- Unclick the box beside
Place a Copy in Folder: 'Sent'.
This will prevent your computer from
placing a copy of any outgoing mail in your Sent folder.
Outlook
- Click on Edit/Options/Send
- Unclick the box beside Save a
copy of sent message in the 'Sent Items' folder.
This will prevent your computer from
placing a copy of any outgoing mail in your Sent Items folder.
- Be sure to delete
incoming messages from your Inbox and also be sure to empty your
'Trash' or 'Deleted Items' folder before exiting your mail program.
If you are using Outlook Express or
Outlook as a mail program, you might consider enabling the feature
that will empty your messages from the 'Deleted Items' folder when you
exit the mail program.
To enable this feature, follow this
path:
Outlook Express:
- Click on Edit/Options/Maintenance
- Click on the box beside Empty
messages from the 'Deleted Items' folder on exit.
This will ensure that your email
program deletes all messages in the 'Deleted Items' folder.
WARNING -
HOW AN ABUSER CAN DISCOVER YOUR INTERNET ACTIVITIES
- email: if someone has access to your email account, he or she may be
able to read your incoming and outgoing mail. if you believe your
account is secure, make sure you choose a password he or she will not
be able to guess.
If you receive threatening or harassing email messages, they should be printed and saved as evidence. Additionally, the
messages may constitute a federal offense. For more information on
this issue, contact your local United States Attorney's Office.
- history / cache file: if someone knows how to read your computer's
history or cache file (automatically saved web pages and graphics), he
or she may be able to see information you have viewed recently on the
internet.
You can clear your history or empty your cache file in your browser's
settings.*
Netscape:
Pull down Edit menu, select Preferences. Click on Navigator on choose
'Clear History'. Click on Advanced then select Cache. Click on "Clear
Disk Cache".
On older versions of Netscape: Pull down Options menu. Select Network
Options, Select Cache. Click on "Clear Disk Cache".
Internet Explorer:
Pull down View menu, select Internet Options. On General page, under
Temporary Internet Files , click on "Delete Files". Under History
click on "Clear History."
AOL:
Pull down Members menu, select Preferences. Click on WWW icon. Then
select Advanced. Purge Cache.
Additionally, a victim needs to make sure that the "Use Inline
Auto complete" box is NOT checked. This function will complete a
partial web address while typing a location in the address bar at the
top of the browser.
If you are using Internet Explorer, this box can be found on the MS
Internet Explorer Page by clicking on the "View" icon at the top, then
"Internet Options", and then the "Advanced" tab. About halfway down
there is a "Use Auto complete" box that can be checked and unchecked by
clicking on it.
* This information may not completely hide your tracks. Many browser
types have features that display recently visited sites. The safest
way to find information on the internet, would be at a local library,
a friend's house, or at work.
A special thanks for this safety information was adapted from VAWOR - Violence Against
Women Online Resources
www.vaw.umn.edu
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