McAfee 5 User Manual

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Internet Security and Privacy
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McAfee Internet Security 5.0
Why packets?
Why go through all this trouble, breaking data down into packets? The answer 
lies in the origins of TCP/IP. Like the Internet itself, it is a product of the Cold 
War. The United States Department of Defense originally developed the 
Internet. It was designed to ensure secure communications, even with 
multiple communications network failures anticipated in the event of a 
nuclear war. TCP/IP solves the problem of network failure by assuming that 
a certain amount of noise always exists in the network— noise referring either 
to random data errors or more serious system crashes. If you have ever tried 
to speak in a noisy room, you know the necessity of repeating yourself—and 
that is exactly what TCP/IP is designed to do. Breaking the data down into 
packets allows the Internet to seek alternate routes if one route is inaccessible. 
If a packet cannot get through or arrives damaged, the receiving computer 
simply requests it again until it arrives successfully. 
When you send an e-mail message, for example, it is broken into several 
packets. Depending on how noisy the network is, each packet may need to be 
routed over a separate route in order to find its way to its destination. 
Furthermore, network problems may cause some of the packets to be delayed 
so they arrive out of order. To compensate, TCP examines each packet as it 
arrives to verify that it's OK. Once all the packets are received, TCP puts them 
back in their original order. Of course, all of this happens quickly and 
automatically, so you will never see the process at work.
The Internet and the Web…what is the difference?
Before the Web, the Internet was mostly command-line driven and 
character-based— you had to type in the exact Internet address of the place 
you wanted to go at a command line. In 1989, Tim Berners-Lee of the European 
Particle Physics Laboratory proposed a new way to share information over the 
Internet. The essential feature in Berner-Lee’s vision of the Web is that it links 
documents together. When you click a link on a Web page, you are 
automatically connected to another Web site. This linking function, combined 
with the increasing graphics abilities of home computers, transformed the 
Internet into a graphically rich place, complete with video, sound, and 
pictures. Through the linking of information together in a graphically 
appealing package, the Web made the Internet more attractive to the typical 
consumer.
The Internet is a network of linked computers that uses TCP/IP as its 
underlying messaging system. The World Wide Web (WWW, or just “Web” 
for short) is hosted by the Internet, and is an ever-expanding collection of 
documents employing a special coding scheme named Hypertext Markup 
Language (HTML).
HTML is a set of commands designed to be interpreted by Web browsers. An 
HTML document consists of content (prose, graphics, video, etc.) and a series 
of commands that tell a Web browser how to display the content.