Safe Browsing
Every time you go online, you’re visiting websites, clicking links, and sharing information โ often without thinking twice. A few simple habits can protect you from fake websites, harmful downloads, and people trying to track or steal your information.
How to Tell If a Website Is Safe
๐ Look for the Padlock
In your browser’s address bar, look for a small padlock icon to the left of the website address. This means the connection between you and the website is encrypted โ your information is being scrambled so others can’t read it while it’s being sent.
The website address should also start with https:// โ the “s” stands for secure. If a site only shows http:// without the “s,” be cautious about entering any personal information.
Important: The padlock means the connection is secure, but it doesn’t guarantee the website itself is trustworthy. Scam websites can have padlocks too. Think of it as a minimum requirement โ not a stamp of approval.
๐ Check the Web Address Carefully
Scammers create websites with addresses that look almost identical to real ones. They count on you not noticing the difference.
Examples of fake addresses:
- amaz0n.com (zero instead of the letter “o”)
- bankofamerica-secure-login.com (real-sounding but completely fake)
- paypa1.com (number “1” instead of the letter “l”)
- facebook.com.account-verify.net (the real address is actually “account-verify.net”)
What to do: When visiting important sites like your bank or email, type the address directly into your browser instead of clicking links. Bookmark your most-used sites so you always go to the right place.
Browsing Habits That Protect You
๐ซ Be Careful What You Click
Not every link is safe. Before clicking, ask yourself:
- Did this link come from someone I trust?
- Was I expecting this link?
- Does the text around it feel urgent or too good to be true?
On a computer, you can hover your mouse over a link (without clicking) to see where it actually goes. The real address will appear in the bottom-left corner of your browser. If it looks strange or doesn’t match what you expected, don’t click it.
โ ๏ธ Watch Out for Pop-Ups and Fake Warnings
You may see a pop-up message while browsing that says your computer is infected, your data is at risk, or you need to call a phone number for help. The message may flash, beep, or try to prevent you from closing it.
The truth: These are fake. Real virus warnings come from security software you’ve already installed โ never from a website. No legitimate company will display a phone number in a browser pop-up.
What to do: Don’t call the number. Don’t click anything in the pop-up. Close the browser tab or window. If you can’t close it, press Ctrl + W on Windows or Command + W on Mac to force the tab closed. If that doesn’t work, restart your computer โ you will not lose your files.
๐ฅ Be Cautious About Downloads
Only download software from official sources โ the company’s own website, the Apple App Store, or the Google Play Store. Avoid downloading programs from pop-up ads, emails, or unfamiliar websites.
If a website says you need to install a special program or browser extension to view content, proceed with extreme caution. Most legitimate websites work fine without installing anything extra.
Keeping Your Browser Up to Date
Your web browser โ whether it’s Chrome, Safari, Firefox, or Edge โ regularly receives security updates that fix weaknesses scammers can exploit. Keeping your browser updated is one of the easiest ways to stay protected.
How to check:
- Chrome: Click the three dots in the top-right corner โ Help โ About Google Chrome
- Safari: Safari updates come through your Mac’s System Settings โ General โ Software Update
- Firefox: Click the three lines in the top-right corner โ Help โ About Firefox
- Edge: Click the three dots in the top-right corner โ Help and Feedback โ About Microsoft Edge
If an update is available, install it. Most browsers can be set to update automatically โ this is the recommended setting.
Public Wi-Fi: Proceed With Caution
Free Wi-Fi at coffee shops, libraries, airports, and hotels is convenient โ but it’s not private. Other people on the same network can potentially see what you’re doing online.
Rules for public Wi-Fi:
- Never log in to your bank or other financial accounts on public Wi-Fi.
- Don’t enter credit card numbers or passwords on public Wi-Fi if you can avoid it.
- Don’t connect to networks with no password. If the Wi-Fi doesn’t require a password to join, it’s completely open.
- Use your phone’s cellular data instead for anything sensitive. Your cell connection is much more secure than public Wi-Fi.
Safe Browsing Checklist
- Type important web addresses directly into your browser โ don’t rely on links from emails or messages.
- Bookmark your bank, email, and healthcare sites so you always end up on the real page.
- Keep your browser updated. Turn on automatic updates if possible.
- Don’t trust pop-up warnings. Close the tab or restart your browser.
- Only download from official sources. If you didn’t go looking for it, you probably don’t need it.
- Avoid sensitive activities on public Wi-Fi. Use your phone’s cellular data for banking and shopping.
- Use a strong, unique password for each site and enable two-factor authentication wherever possible.
