Tag: scam

Virus Found Scam

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You’re using Google or another browser and up pops a window that looks official.

It says

Some suspicious activity has been detected at your IP address.

Cydoor spyware may have caused a network breach at your location.

Personal and financial information may be at risk.

Call toll-free 0800-014-8212

Please contact a certified Microsoft technician to rectify your situation

Please do not attempt to close your browser or open another one in order to avoid corruption of your operating system.

A second popup claims that multiple high risk infections have been detected and my credit card information is at risk. So I must call the toll free number.

This is just a scam. The phone number isn’t for a Microsoft certified professional, it’s a scammers number and they will then convince me to let them take control of my PC and end up paying a lot of money to remove non-existent problems.

Don’t fall for this. If you see these kinds of messages – disconnect the Internet and shut down the computer then restart it and run an anti-virus scan.

If you are in any doubt as to whether your computer has a virus – then take it to a professional but do not call the phone numbers in the popups.

What Are Those Time-Wasters Up To Now?

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So, what rubbish emails and calls have there been to Brooklands Radio station in the last few days?

An offer to put 2 million banner adverts on the Internet over a 4 week period for just £645 – You can see why there are so many ads on the Internet – they are very cheap but also largely ineffective.

A Chinese printing company wanting to do our printing at low prices – it isn’t real though. Just someone looking for leads to sell.

A moron offering the recipe for a drink that can solve all problems known to mankind.  And the end of the message includes half a page of random words – trying to foil the spam catcher software into thinking it’s not spam. But it so obviously is just that.

An email offering to compare accountants. The message is from [email protected] which is a giveaway that it’s just someone looking for leads to sell to accountancy companies.

A genuine email from an organisation that does language translation for business – harmless but no use to us as a volunteer radio station.  The email goes on about international competitors taking our business and how much more profitable international work can be. Irrelevant.

These people just waste our time and clog up the Internet with rubbish.

Malvertising – The Bad Advertising

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Malvertising (the word is a contraction of “malicious advertising”) and means to use online advertising to spread malware which is computer viruses and programmes that take over your PC or steal identity information etc.

Malvertising is carried out by inserting malicious adverts into legitimate advertising networks and the ads can end up on highly reputable websites.  Malvertising is “attractive to attackers because they ‘can be easily spread across a large number of legitimate websites.

Malvertising is hard to combat because it can work its way into a webpage and spread through a system unknowingly:  It is able to expose millions of users to malware, even the most cautious, and is growing rapidly:

In 2012, it was estimated nearly 10 billion ad impressions were compromised by malvertising and things are not really getting much better.

Malvertising often involves the exploitation of trustworthy companies. Those attempting to spread malware place “clean” advertisements on trustworthy sites first in order to gain a good reputation, then they later insert a virus or spyware in the code behind the ad, and after a mass virus infection is produced, they remove the virus, thus infecting all visitors of the site during that time period. The identities of those responsible are often hard to trace, making it hard to prevent the attacks or stop them altogether, because the ad network infrastructure is very complex with many linked connections between ads and click-through destinations.

In 2015, there were Malvertising attacks against, eBay, answers.com, talktalk.co.uk and many others. It involved breaches of ad networks, including DoubleClick. Even the New York Times and the London Stock Exchange were affected.

This is difficult for the end user to combat as it depends very much on the security at the advertising networks.

Don’t automatically trust adverts on respected websites as they may not realise what’s being advertised.