All of our website defacement detection processes are non-invasive, meaning there is absolutely nothing to install, configure or maintain on your web server or by your IT staff. All of our analysis is performed from the perspective of your visitors, and what type of content is presented to their computers.

When you sign up with WebDog Security Systems, our first step is to perform a thorough analysis of your website. Depending on your web server platform, we use various techniques to detect:

Installation source code of all known viruses
· Installation source code of all known spyware/adware
· External and internal links or references to all known illicit domain names
· External and internal links or references to all known illicit web server IP addresses
· Embedded and externally linked pornographic images
· Broken or redirected internal and external links
· DNS Issues
· Website Availability
· Profane text

We then prepare a detailed report of our findings and the exact locations in which suspect material is revealed.

After the initial analysis, our exclusive Vandal Vanguard process takes over on an continuous and ongoing basis.

How VANDAL VANGUARD works
The Vandal Vanguard service works to protect you in three steps:

Scrubbing Our system scans all static web pages on your website every 5 minutes, checks for availability and detects any changes to content. All changes are checked against a constantly growing database of thousands of indicators of suspicious content. When likely unauthorized content is discovered, our team is alerted and the issue is submitted for validation.

Analysis On a 24x7 basis, our Internet security analysts continually examine the reports of the scrubbing processes. When an incident has been validated through human confirmation, our staff begins the notification process to alert you to the situation so that your website administrators can resolve the problem.

Notification Whenever an incident is discovered and validated, WebDog immediately notifies you via email and SMS text messages. Within the messages, the type of issue, location and source code is contained so that you have a pinpoint to exactly where the problem exists and can take the appropriate action.