Home Office Security Tip #1 (COVID-19/Coronavirus edition)
/The legal profession is one that can weather through this COVID-19/Coronavirus pandemic. We can easily more our place of work from a traditional office setting to a home office with little interruption. But with that transition (especially those not used to working from home), we need to be a bit wearier that our client information is secure. Curious kids, unassuming family members, and those with more nefarious intent can accidentally or deliberately create a security breach, access your client's data files, and cause some bar complaints down the road.
Mitigate this with some simple actions: Password protect your computer!
For Mac Users, go to your Apple icon on the top right, select "Security and Privacy," then under the "General" set login password. Power tip: Use the "Require Password" after x minutes when the computer goes to sleep mode or your screen saver begins. This way, you can ensure security should you walk away for a few minutes and forget to log off or shut down the machine. Super Power tip: On the same General" tap, you can use your Apple Watch to unlock your Mac (and specific applications)!
For Windows Users, there are at least two easy ways you can set a password for a user account.
Enter your "Control Panel", under "User Accounts and Family Safety" choose "Change Account Type," under "Manage Accounts" select the "User Account" you want to change, click on "Create a Password", enter your password (look for a future post about creating and securing your passwords), renter your password, elect whether your password is case sensitive, and click "Change" password; or
On your keyboard, Press Windows+I, select "User and accounts", select sign-in options, under "Password" (look for a future post about creating and securing your passwords) select "Add", create a new password, provide a "New password", reenter the password, provide a password hint (if so desired), click next then click finish.
Working from home may be a new challenge for some of us; let’s remember to be smart about it when we do!