A few months ago, a friend of mine got his mac hacked all to pieces after falling victim to either a honeypot router or having horrible personal network security, or a little bit of both. Probably a little bit of both. This led to him ending up on the wrong end of some phishing and all kinds of bad things developed from there. Like Chester Bennington kinds of bad things.
I am by no means an expert on network security, but some other people have turned me on to OpenDNS as a good step for reducing one's vulnerability to phishing. I made the suggested changes to my computer and to my router and I am pretty pleased with it. It has saved me from one phishing site so far, which, after seeing the ordeal my friend went through, is worth the 5 minutes it took to set it up right there. It's free, so it has that going for it as well.
OpenDNS does have its detractors though. I am watching the comments/ongoing discussion to the post on this site to see how it comes out now that John Roberts from OpenDNS has chimed in. Unless something more horrible comes out of it aside from OpenDNS' practice of retaining personal DNS request information for 2 business days, I'm staying with them. Besides, if you register (I did) you can choose not to have any data collected.
