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If someone entered your home,
uninvited and installed numerous cameras and listening
devices in order to monitor your activities, you would
quite rightly be outraged. While such a situation, unless
you are living in the Big Brother House, would be
considered ridiculous, the same cannot be said for the
humble home computer.
Recently released research
alarmingly shows that home PC’s are increasingly likely
to host software which can watch each and every keystroke
the user inputs. According to the research compiled from
an audit conducted jointly by the software firm, WebRoot
and services provider, EarthLink, the average home PC
hosts 28 so-called spyware programs.
Whilst the worst examples
of spyware are written by virus writers to steal passwords
and hijack computers to launch “denial of service”
attacks against web-servers, the vast majority are used to
collate marketing information and then target advertising
according to the end-users web surfing habits.
The WebRoot/EarthLink audit
surveyed more than 1.5 million PC’s during the last 12
months and discovered an amazing 41 million incidents of
spyware; adware, Trojans, tracking cookies and other
undesirable programs.
Most of these programs are
loaded into the computer memory when the PC is started up.
From here, the program will work silently, often giving no
clues as to its existence. However, unexplained browser
window pop-up’s, often advertising adult services and
mysterious alterations to the browsers homepage setting
are more often than not an indication that spyware is
present and active on a computer. One particular piece of
spyware, which is proving to be very expensive for many
home users, is that of Trojan Diallers. Diallers, often
without any warning to the end-user, hangs up the current
net connection and then automatically reconnects using a
Premium Rate telephone number, thus running up huge
telephone bills. The activities of companies using this
technology as a revenue stream are currently under
investigation in the UK by government watchdogs.
A hard-disk and memory
overflowing with spyware used to be one of the unfortunate
consequences of visiting sex and adult orientated sites; a
kind of eSTD. Like most Internet marketing technologies,
from the pop-up to the pop-under and the first snowball of
Spam, spyware began life serving the adult industry. Then,
just like pop-up, spyware filtered through all aspects of
ecommerce. In an interview to the BBC, David Moll, CEO of
WebRoot, said that spyware has now become so common across
the whole of the Internet, that it can be contracted from
nearly anywhere.
So-called “drive-by
downloads” are now responsible for most infections of
spyware. The term “drive-by” refers to the casualness
of the infection. By simply visiting an ordinary webpage a
user can unwittingly initiate an automatic download of
spyware onto their computer. There are no clues and no
warnings.
In a recent, carefully
controlled and closed demonstration, it took me less than
20 minutes to create a spyware program and embed it into a
webpage. Using colleagues who had previously been made
aware of the nature of the experiment, I invited them to
take a look at this “special” but very ordinary
looking webpage. Within seconds of visiting this webpage,
the spyware went to work taking a snapshot of their hard
disk, a snapshot of their Favourites folder and a copy of
their browsing history. Before they had even finished
reading the webpage, the spyware was already transferring
their information to my server. It’s as easy as that!
Equally that same code could be manipulated to perform a
total trash of the hard disk or some other equally
miserable and criminal act.
Speaking to the BBC, David
Moll explained.
"Some (spyware
programs) lurk on misspelled URLs and strike those that
type faster than their fingers can carry them. As a result
you do not end up where you expect to be."
Alarmingly, users do not
even need to visit a website to contract spyware. The
preview window in Microsoft’s Outlook Express allows
emails containing HTML and any other code which can be
placed on a normal webpage, to be loaded, without warning.
Companies looking to implant spyware using the
“drive-by” principal are regularly exploiting this
glaringly obvious flaw in the design of Outlook Express.
"If you get one piece
of spyware, you will get five because the business model
says they pay each other to pass on information about
victims," said Mr Moll.
Thankfully
anti-spyware/adware programs such as Ad-Aware (free) and
WebRoot’s own offering, Spy Sweeper can clean up a PC
and even help prevent further infections, but just like
anti-virus software, anti-spyware software needs to be
kept up-to-date to remain effective.
In addition to providing
software solutions to this problem, legislators too are
seeking to end this electronic intrusion. In the USA an
anti-spyware bill is moving towards approval in Congress.
If successfully implemented, this bill will force firms
who wish to use spyware to first receive permission from
the end-user before it is installed. But even before any
new laws come into place, spyware makers are already
working on next generation coding which keep their
programs intact and operational….perhaps even on your
PC.
Related Links:
WebRoot Spyware Audit http://www.webroot.com/services/spyaudit_03.htm
Ad-Aware http://www.lavasoftusa.com/software/adaware/
WebRoot http://www.webroot.com/
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About
The Author
Robert
Palmer is CEO of deskNET Communications www.desknet.co.uk
the first affordable alternative to opt-in
email marketing and newsletters. With over
20 years professional experience in
software development, Robert is a leading
architect in the development of the
emerging Net technology, One-2-Many
Broadcasting software. |
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