Intro: The clickbait diet - is this the summer diet that will really work?! The best summer diet plans are, for many of us, something we can spend hours searching for online or discuss with friends or family members in order to quickly achieve the body beautiful in time to hit the beach. With so many ads bombarding our web browers promising us that it’s easy as 1-2-3 to shed belly fat, reduce the size of our thighs, or get abs of steel it can be all too tempting to tap on clickbait diet ads in the hope that it will give the desired results - this time! Summer diet plans are nothing new - infact over the course of the past 15 years I have gone on a fair amount of diets including the Atkins diet, the 5:2 diet, and the oyster and champagne …show more content…
Remember with secure sites you will see at the beginning of the URL either “http” or “https.” The difference here is the all important “S” which means secure, and any website your visit with “https” is secure, which means that part of your session is encrypted. If the “S” is not there, it could be a phishing scam designed to steal your login information. Check out these security checking tools from TechWorld. When we see a clickbait diet ad that promises the impossible, for example, “Lose 20 Pounds in One Week”, we’ll click on it rarely giving a moment's thought that our online security could be at risk. After all, if the ad promises that if we follow the steps we’ll lose 20 pounds in a week - it must be true! The adage “if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is” is something to think about before tapping on a clickbait diet ad! Check that your laptop or workstation has the latest up-to-date antivirus software. Online attacks, viruses and malware are all becoming as increasingly sophisticated as the machines which they target. Because of this, use of a reliable, up-to-date antivirus programme is just as, if not more important than