• Meet Our Team
  • Advertise on SCDN
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Contact Us
Sunday, May 24
Scioto County Daily News
  • Login
  • Register
Subscribe For $1/week
  • Public Safety
    sleeping near star workshop

    MAN WITH LONG RAP SHEET FOUND SLEEPING BESIDE STAR WORKSHOP

    Wheelersburg thefts

    TOOLS, BLOWERS, AND THOUSANDS IN EQUIPMENT STOLEN IN WHEELERSBURG THEFTS

    “AIR DUSTING” SCARE AT REHAB FACILITY LEADS TO OVERDOSE CALL

    caller reports kid being strangled

    CALLER REPORTS KID BEING STRANGLED — CHAOTIC SCENE ENDS WITH CPS INVOLVED

    Burglar leave strange clue

    BURGLAR LEAVES STRANGE CLUE BEHIND AFTER WEST PORTSMOUTH BREAK-IN

    He told me he was almost 17

    “HE TOLD ME HE WAS ALMOST 17”

    TPO Drama at School

    TPO DRAMA SPILLS INTO SCHOOL EVENTS

    Scioto County Grand Jury Indictments

    11 New Scioto County Grand Jury Indictments

    sex offender threats

    🚨 Registered Sex Offender Sparks Concern After Rehab Facility Reports Violent Threats

    rolling roadblock

    Deputies Use Rolling Roadblock to Stop Strangulation Suspect

    Pair busted with meth & crack

    PAIR BUSTED WITH METH, FENTANYL, CRACK AND CASH DURING PORTSMOUTH TRAFFIC STOP

    dumped near well water

    Raw Sewage Dumped Near Homes Using Well Water

    dog poop drama leads to pepper spray threat

    DOG POOP DRAMA ESCALATES INTO PEPPER SPRAY THREAT ON RITCHIE STREET

    Friends won't give care back

    “My Friends Won’t Give Me My Car Back”: Post-Jail Drama Turns Into Expensive Lesson

    can you holdl dog

    “Can You Hold the Dog Until Morning?”: Abandoned Animal Complaint Tests Strained System

    Human trafficking sting

    AREA MEN AMONG 122 ARRESTED IN MASSIVE OHIO HUMAN TRAFFICKING STING

    chaois in south webster

    CHAOS AT SOUTH WEBSTER STORE ENDS WITH MAN COLLAPSING IN PARKING LOT

    cops follow blood trail

    Cops Follow Blood Trail After Late Night Call For Help

    father hunts for missing son

    Father Frantically Searches for Missing Son Last Seen Walking Along U.S. 52

    Pot run leads to car theft

    Pot Run Prompts Stolen Car Charges at Little League Game

  • Lawrence County
  • Politics
    commissioner condemn anti-semitic language

    Commissioners Condemn Anti-Semitic Language Amid Ongoing Dog Shelter Controversy

    Scioto County Land Bank

    Why Is the Scioto Land Bank Under So Much Scrutiny Right Now? 

    workplace slur

    IF “SHE’S NOT JEWISH” IS THE DEFENSE, THE WORKPLACE PROBLEM IS WORSE THAN THE SLUR

    Portsmouth riverfront project

    Riverfront Project Underway as Portsmouth Tackles Repairs, Upgrades and Thousands of Calls

    smith and mault win

    Mault & Smith Survive Turbulent Primary

    Where did paving money go

    Where Did the Paving Money Go? Portsmouth Spent $2.39 Million on Streets in Four Years

    Land bank overhaul

    Land Bank Overhaul Promised After Complaints About Fairness

    45000 and nothing to show

    $45,000 and Nothing to Show: Portsmouth Wraps Up Costly Lawsuit Filed by Former Mayor

    Scioto County Road Work

    $29 Million in Road Work — Here’s How Scioto County Is Fixing Streets (And Why It Matters to You)

    Dog Shelter Drama Under Investigation

    “We Know What’s Going On”: Commissioners Push Back, Say Dog Shelter Drama Is Under Investigation

    Bad kids terrorize neighborhood

    Bad Kids Terrorize Neighborhood

    craft assault arrest

    Paroled Drug Trafficker Puts Up a Fight After Cops Bust Him in Traffic Jam

    Scioto County Investigating Potential Data Breach After Employees Fall for Phishing Scam

    Horton Davis

    Little Movement in Horton and Davis Corruption Cases as New Hearings Scheduled 

    Portsmouth City Council News

    Three “Emergency” Ordinances Headed to Portsmouth City Council Monday 

    Commissioner Scottie Powell

    Powell Blasts Proposed NDA Ban as “Lazy Legislation” 

    Commissioners Respond to Open Meetings Lawsuit Over Data Center

    Commissioners React to Proposed Ohio Law Banning NDAs for Elected Officials 

    Davis Horton

    Davis and Horton Corruption Cases Inch Forward with New Court Dates — But Don’t Expect Quick Resolutions 

    Scioto County Primary

    Scioto County Primary 101: Who’s Running, Who Isn’t — and Why This Election Matters 

  • Feel Good
    A person in a striped shirt shown from behind carrying a large backpack while walking along a paved street outdoors.

    How To Personalize Your Backpack for Comfort and Style

    Stadium Plan revealed

    $10 Million Spartan Stadium Plans Revealed

    PPD to the rescue

    Woman With Walker Tries To Hike to McDermott – PPD to the Rescue

    Hippies

    Dear Dirty Hippies, ‘Sorry About That’

    Jenna Jenkins Eagle Scout

    History Made: Jenna Jenkins Becomes Scioto County’s First Female Eagle Scout

    A smiling woman is holding a wrapped present in her hands as someone gives it to her.

    Personal Gift Ideas That Will Hold Special Meaning

    Steve Hayes

    Scioto County Declares December 11 “Steve Hayes Day,” Honoring a Radio Legend After Nearly Six Decades on the Air 

    A silver thermal pouch sits alone on a white and gray background. The top of the bag is cut open.

    How To Choose the Right Closure for Thermal Pouches

    sending flowers to Japan

    Flower Delivery: Share Scioto’s Heart with Japan

    Honoring Scioto County’s First Town — and Its First People: New Heritage Trail Sign Dedicated at Earl Thomas Conley Park 

    A man approaching the bowling lane with a red bowling ball as his three friends in the background cheer him on.

    How Bowling Can Improve Your Mental Health

    A sleek blue sedan parked on concrete. Behind the vehicle is a view of the sky with a setting sun over a body of water.

    How To Make Your Daily Driver Feel Like a Sports Car

    A person's hand is holding a miniature wooden house with a green roof and a budding plant on top against a green background.

    How To Reduce Your Carbon Footprint at Home

    A man sitting in a vehicle is handing over an ID card to a female police officer standing by his window.

    Tips for Staying Calm During Police Encounters

    Cyn Mackley

    Cyn Mackley Channels Haunted Appalachia

    A group of friends stand around a table, smiling, laughing, and drinking. There are plates of food on the table.

    Creative Ways To Host Outdoor Events This Summer

    A family of two parents and a young boy and girl are playing laser tag with vests and laser blasters in an arena.

    What Activities To Offer at a Family Fun Center

    Shawnee State University SSU

    Shawnee State University Joins New Athletic Conference, Adds Football to Lineup 

    BREAKING: Commissioners Make Shocking Decision—Halloween to Remain on Halloween 

    Escape to the Hills: A Summer Reading List Set in Appalachia 

  • Obituaries
    Eloise Osborne

    Eloise Osborne, 81 of West Portsmouth

    Charles Edward Euton 96 of Wheelersburg

    John Fraley

    John Fraley, 89 of Portsmouth

    David Lee Fields

    David Lee Fields, 77 of Wheelersburg

    David Leroy Stevenson

    David Leroy Stevenson, 82 of Portsmouth

    Lou Ann Timberlake Adams

    Lou Ann Adams, 66 of Wheelersburg

    Ellen Louise Butler Riffe, 87 of Melbourne

    Charles E. Whitt Jr., 95 of Portsmouth

    Ernest Bryant Fugate

    Ernest Bryant Fugate III, 65, of Portsmouth

    Linda Sue Rodman Hill

    Linda Sue Rodman Hill, 75 of Greenup

    Sharon Kay (Piguet) Pace, 85 of Wheelersburg

    Harold Emerson Kronk Sr

    Harold Emerson Kronk, Sr., 85, of Minford

    Mary Ellen Leightenheimer

    Mary Ellen Leightenheimer, 69 of Rosemount

    Colton James Harger

    Colton James Harger, 20 of Waverly

    Sylvia Ann Collins

    Sylvia Ann Collins, 86 of Portsmouth

    Linda Sue Rodman Hill

    Linda Sue Rodman Hill, 75 of Greenup

    Dennis Harold Dexter

    Dennis Harold Dexter, 68 of South Shore

    Patsy E. Todt

    Patsy E. Todt, 77 of West Portsmouth

    Danny P. Keeton

    Danny P. Keeton, 79 of Portsmouth

    William C. Perkins

    William C. Perkins, 89 of New Boston

  • More News
    • All News
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Education
    • Economy
    • Food & Drinks
    • Local Business
    • National
    • Opinion
    • Regional
    • Strange But True
    • Trending
No Result
View All Result
Scioto County Daily News
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
Scioto County Daily News
No Result
View All Result

More People Working From Home In Southern Ohio—But Is Your Internet Connection Putting You At Risk?

NicoleTaylor by NicoleTaylor
10 months ago
in Local Business
Southern Ohio

Photo by Oz Seyrek on Unsplash

ShareTweetEmail

Remote work has seen a sharp rise across Southern Ohio, from suburban homes near Cincinnati to the quieter stretches of Jackson and Gallia counties. While the flexibility, reduced commuting, and lower overhead costs are hard to ignore, an unsettling truth lingers behind the shift: many people are now working from home with internet setups that were never designed for professional use. 

Home networks, often set up for streaming and shopping, simply weren’t built to support the security demands of modern telework.

Why Proxy Checkers Deserve A Spot In Your Security Stack

A proxy checker may sound like tools for coders or cybersecurity analysts, but they’ve quietly become essential for anyone working from home.

A proxy server acts as a middleman between your computer and the websites or services you use. It helps mask your IP address, enabling privacy, geo-targeted access, and added layers of anonymity. Proxies—especially free or public ones—can be misconfigured, slow, or even malicious. That’s where proxy checkers come in.

These tools inspect whether the proxies you use are functional, secure, and truly anonymous. For example, a remote insurance adjuster using third-party web tools with a proxy may unknowingly reveal their real IP, location, or login credentials—if the proxy isn’t secure. Proxy checkers flag these vulnerabilities in real time.

The Hidden Vulnerabilities Of Rural And Suburban Internet Setups

Most Southern Ohio homes weren’t designed with cybersecurity in mind. And when remote work is layered onto a network meant for casual streaming and shopping, cracks begin to show.

Many broadband connections in towns like Waverly, West Union, or McArthur still rely on older routers and default ISP configurations. These routers may have outdated firmware, weak administrative passwords, or unsecured guest networks. Add in the common habit of letting multiple household devices share one network—and you’ve got a cocktail of vulnerabilities.

RELATED POSTS

MAN WITH LONG RAP SHEET FOUND SLEEPING BESIDE STAR WORKSHOP

CALLER REPORTS KID BEING STRANGLED — CHAOTIC SCENE ENDS WITH CPS INVOLVED

BURGLAR LEAVES STRANGE CLUE BEHIND AFTER WEST PORTSMOUTH BREAK-IN

ISPs in the region often offer minimal built-in security beyond a generic firewall. That means it’s up to the user to manually install network encryption, segment guest devices from work hardware, and monitor for strange traffic behavior. Few do.

The consequence? Malware can spread quickly across devices. A phishing email opened on a teenager’s laptop could allow a hacker lateral movement to access your work files. Worse still, ransomware targeting VPN tunnels has been increasingly aimed at remote workers in lightly protected environments.

Investing in upgraded routers, enabling WPA3 encryption, and disabling remote access features you don’t need can greatly improve your home setup’s resilience.

Weak Password Habits: A Cybercriminal’s Dream

It’s not just your network hardware that needs attention—it’s your login credentials, too.

Data from 2024 suggests that over 61% of home workers in the U.S. still reuse the same passwords across multiple platforms. In Southern Ohio, where many professionals juggle local business accounts, healthcare portals, and school systems, password fatigue leads to shortcuts.

The danger is compounded by the increased use of shared cloud services. A weak password on a file-sharing app or CRM system could allow a data breach that impacts hundreds of clients—not just one household.

One of the easiest defenses is enabling multi-factor authentication (MFA). While many users still avoid it for convenience, MFA reduces the risk of unauthorized logins by up to 99.9%, according to Microsoft.

Password managers like Bitwarden or 1Password, paired with MFA, ensure that even if a breach occurs, your credentials aren’t easy to replicate. And for Southern Ohio workers handling sensitive data (e.g., tax prep, medical forms, legal documents), that layer of protection is increasingly becoming a necessity, not a luxury.

The Rise Of Remote Phishing In Local Networks

Phishing scams have evolved, and now they’re specifically targeting remote workers in suburban and rural areas.

Southern Ohio saw a 16% rise in phishing-related complaints filed with the FCC in 2023. Why? Because local targets often lack company-wide security training and may not recognize sophisticated social engineering attempts. One well-crafted email appearing to come from a bank, a delivery service, or a client can convince a user to click—and expose their machine to spyware or credential harvesting scripts.

What makes phishing even more effective now is the blend of personal and work usage on the same devices. A remote worker might check a work email, then switch tabs to a personal Gmail account or shopping site. A phishing link clicked while browsing a personal account could still infect the device used for work.

To stay safe, remote workers should:

Please Support This Local Business
  • Use browser extensions that warn against known phishing domains (like Netcraft or uBlock Origin)
  • Run regular scans with antimalware tools like Malwarebytes
  • Separate personal and professional browser profiles

More importantly, anyone working remotely should routinely attend cybersecurity training—even if self-led—every six months.

Insecure Video Conferencing: A Leak Waiting To Happen

Video conferencing has become a lifeline for collaboration, but it’s also a weak spot for many work-from-home users in Southern Ohio.

Many default video call apps do not enable end-to-end encryption. If you’re discussing legal strategy, financial plans, or medical consultations on platforms like Zoom, Google Meet, or Skype, you need to know exactly how protected that call is.

Zoom, for instance, only offers true end-to-end encryption in its advanced settings or paid tiers. But many users in smaller towns—from Lucasville to Jackson—use the free version. Without adjusting security settings or using a secure meeting ID protocol, your conversation could be intercepted, or worse, accessed via meeting bombing.

Protect yourself by:

  • Always using waiting rooms or authentication-enabled logins
  • Avoiding screen sharing unless absolutely necessary
  • Never discussing sensitive personal or client data on an unsecured line

Organizations can also invest in platforms like Signal or Microsoft Teams Premium, which prioritize security over ease of access.

Photo by Nelly Antoniadou on Unsplash

Endnote

Southern Ohio’s work-from-home boom isn’t slowing down—but neither are the threats that come with it. Proxy checkers provide a first line of defense for anyone using anonymized connections, but broader risks—ranging from phishing and poor password hygiene to insecure routers and smart-home vulnerabilities—must be addressed too.

Tags: FinancialGalliaLucasvilleOhioprofessionalsSouthern OhioVideoWaverlyWest Union
Please Support This Local Business

TRENDING NOW

Busted Arrests Portsmouth Scioto County Mugshots

Busted! 05/18/26 New Arrests in Portsmouth, Ohio – Scioto County Mugshots

May 18, 2026
church robbed

CHURCH ROBBED, TV VANISHES, TOOLS STOLEN: THEFT CALLS KEEP PORTSMOUTH POLICE BUSY

May 18, 2026
felonious assault bust

FIGHT AT WEST PORTSMOUTH REHAB ENDS WITH FELONIOUS ASSAULT CHARGE

May 18, 2026
Man arrested after knife threat

Man Charged After Knife Threat

May 18, 2026
Colton James Harger

Colton James Harger, 20 of Waverly

May 16, 2026

ABOUT US

We are a grassroots team of local journalists on a mission to give our community up-to-the-second news and events for Southern Ohio, Northern Kentucky, and Western West Virginia. We believe progress inspires change and we believe our reporting has become the front-lines of Portsmouth, Ohio's comeback.

CATEGORIES

  • Arts & Entertainment
  • Casino
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Feel Good
  • Food & Drink
  • Local Business
  • National
  • Obituaries
  • Ohio
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Public Safety
  • Regional
  • Strange But True
  • vavada
  • Video

AREAS SERVED

  • Portsmouth
  • Wheelersburg
  • Minford
  • Waverly
  • Friendship
  • Ironton
  • West Union
  • Piketon
  • Coal Grove
  • South Point
  • Vanceburg
  • Grayson
  • South Shore
  • Greenup
  • Raceland
  • Ashland

SITE SEARCH

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

© 2025 Scioto County Daily News. All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Public Safety
  • Lawrence County
  • Obituaries
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Feel Good
  • All News
  • About Us
    • Meet Our Team
    • FAQ
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise on SCDN
  • Legal
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service

© 2025 Scioto County Daily News. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Public Safety
  • Lawrence County
  • Obituaries
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Feel Good
  • All News
  • About Us
    • Meet Our Team
    • FAQ
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise on SCDN
  • Legal
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service

© 2025 Scioto County Daily News. All Rights Reserved.