Posts Tagged malware

Microsoft and New York Times Get Scammed

The NY Times Digital Advertising department unknowingly placed a malicious ad for fake antivirus software on the newspapers website.  The scammers claimed to be Vonage, the Internet phone provider, and posted an ad on the site. During the weekend, the advertisements were switched to pop-up ads that made website visitors think that their computers were infected.  This was done over the weekend so to make it harder for IT staff to respond. Click here to read the entire article. WingSwept suggests you beware of all pop ups and even be careful when closing it. Use the key Alt + F4 to close windows, because sometimes a ad has a “close” link but clicking it may actually be triggering it perform another action.

Around the same times, Microsoft filed five charges against scammers that put malware that was mistaken as legitimate advertisements on their AdCenter network. By clicking on the advertisements, one was led to a website that claimed his/her computer was infected and that the individual needed to purchase the anti-virus product (which was fake). They are unsure who is behind the exploitation, but hope that filing the five civil lawsuits will help uncover the criminals. A Microsoft representative said that, “Microsoft works vigilantly, using both technology and the law, to fight illegal activity that undermines people’s trust in the Internet and online services.” Learn more about malware and Microsoft’s lawsuits.

These stories shows how creative hackers have gotten and that their tactics have proven it possible for anyone to be tricked.

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Personal Anti-virus, a new threat to users

Personal Anti-virus (PAV) is becoming one of the newer types of malware that is not being caught by most programs. The trickiest part of this “scareware” is that it starts as a pop-up window that coerces the user to click and accept the installation, which itself looks like a virus scan.  The reason many anti-virus programs don’t catch PAV is because it does not act like a typical virus behavior and your anti-virus programs assume that most installations are allowed by the user.

This article claims one of the only defenses you really have is your common sense, which is exactly why we are blogging on this topic.  Beware!

WingSwept’s technicians recommend this reading to help you further understand PAV.

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10 Types of Malware

The dynamic of today’s IT environment makes it easy for computer malware (malicious software) to exist, even thrive. Being educated about what threats are out there is the first step for every computer user.  Did you know there are 10 types of malware?

  1. Infamous computer virus
  2. The ever-popular computer worm
  3. The unknown backdoor
  4. The secretive Trojan horse
  5. Adware/spyware
  6. User-mode rootkits
  7. Kernel-model rootkits
  8. Firmware rootkits
  9. Malicious mobile code
  10. Blended threat

To learn more about what malware is and read about the 10 types of malware, WingSwept recommends you read this informative article.

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