Internet Explorer saves a lot of web site information and data in
temporary files for faster retrieval in the future. For most web
sites that isn't a problem, but saving encrypted web pages that
should be secure to a temp file on your disk can pose a security
risk. This tip will show you how to disable the saving of
encrypted web pages.
As you surf the World Wide Web, Internet Explorer saves a lot
of information about the sites you have visited including caching
copies of the actual web site pages to your hard disk in the
Temporary Internet Files folder. In general this caching of
information helps speed up access to sites you visit frequently
because Internet Explorer can retrieve the information from the
local disk rather than re-downloading redundant information from
the remote web server.
For the majority of web sites you visit this is beneficial and
poses no practical risk to you. It can pose a risk to compromising
confidential or private information however if encrypted web pages
are saved to the disk. When you access an online investing site or
a banking site or other web sites of that nature the session is
generally encrypted. Usually you will see the URL begin with
"https" rather than just "http" which indicates that the session
is ecnrypted with SSL That means that the information is encoded
so that only your computer and the server you are communicating
with can understand it. Anybody who might intercept the data
midstream would only receive gibberish, so your private and
confidential data is safe.
That safety is negated however if Internet Explorer caches
copies of the supposedly private information on your disk in the
Temporary Internet Files. Should anyone gain remote access to your
computer through a virus or Trojan, or should someone have
physical access to simply sit down at your computer they may be
able to access the cached data and retrieve information that
should have been encrypted and protected. In order to prevent this
you can disable the ability for Internet Explorer to save
encrypted web page data.
1. Open an Internet Explorer session
2. On the menu bar click on Tools and select Internet Options
3. Click on the Advanced tab
4. Scroll through the list to the Security section at the
bottom
5. Check the box next to the option "Do Not Save Encrypted
Pages To Disk"
6. Click OK to close the window and initiate the changes
Once you have completed those steps your future web surfing
should be safer, but you still have to do something about the
encrypted web data which has already been saved to your computer.
To erase the existing data do the following:
1. Open an Internet Explorer session
2. On the menu bar click on Tools and select Internet Options
3. Under Temporary Internet Files on the General tab click
Delete Files
4. On the message that pops up click the box that says "Delete
all offline content" and click OK
5 Click OK to close the window
Now you have erased any potentially compromising information
from your disk and disabled the ability of Internet Explorer to
save encrypted web page information to your computer in the
future.
Note: Other browsers should have similar capabilities.
Simply research their help to find out the proper procedures.
Fortunately, most browsers come with this particular setting set
to "DO NOT SAVE". Therefore if you haven't changed it in the
past, then you stand a very good chance of having the default
working in your favor. However, to be sure, you may just
want to check.