JorgeA, on 05 June 2010 - 09:41 AM, said:
Would you say that there's generally just too much focus on (or trust in) software firewalls?
There are a lot of die-hard win-98 users that are still running ie6, have never tried another browser, who access the internet on dial-up, and who are paranoid about security and are getting ulcers over the end of fire-wall and antivirus support for win-98. No matter how many times you tell them that win-98 is not and never has been vulnerable to any network worm, they just don't listen or understand. And those of them on broadband, with their computer behind a NAT-router, have zero to worry about.
Firewalls were useful back during the early days of commercial and residential broad-band (1998 - 2002) and back then Windows NT, 2K and XP-SP0 desperately needed to have a firewall app running on it. Lots of those machines became infected with stuff that turned them into someone's private file server (usually hidden in the recycler directory).
NT-based OS's are simply not designed well enough to be trusted to sit even on a local lan without having their own in-bound firewall. Windows 9x/me, either by dumb luck or good design, is simply far less vulnerable to network intrusion and remote control. But the popular press and technology writers have always focused way more on the NT-based os's, so when they write about Windows needing a firewall, they mean NT, 2K, XP, etc.
JorgeA, on 05 June 2010 - 09:41 AM, said:
I've never had a case where the Norton firewall alerted me to an unknown program trying to go out on the 'Net. But there have been times where it's told me that it blocked an outside attempt to invade my Win98 PC. However, that was when the PC was on dial-up. I don't remember it happening again since I got DSL.
Any attempt to "invade" your PC would not have worked - even without your firewall if you're running win-98. Those attempts are still happening, but are being blocked by your modem now.
JorgeA, on 05 June 2010 - 09:41 AM, said:
Let me make sure I have this right. So I can actually set up a LAN behind this Westell device, enabling file sharing and the like, while dispensing with the various PCs' individual software firewalls, and they will still have as much protection from intruders as before?
Your windows-98 systems will not and do not need to be running firewall software. Period.
Your NT-based PC's can infect each-other on the local lan (they won't be able to infect your win-98 systems - unless you share the c:\windows directory on your win-98 machines).
Your NT-based PC's will not be directly infected by any sort of worm or packet-based intrusion from the internet, but if they get infected due to you downloading and running an infected file, clicking on an viral e-mail attachment, or triggering a browser-based exploit while web surfing, then the resulting infection could spread to your other NT-based machines unless they are running their own local in-bound firewall.
Your local lan is protected / hidden from the internet as far as file-sharing goes, and even more so if you bind your file-sharing to the NetBEUI protocal instead of TCP/IP.