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Brute force attack yields keys to Google's kingdom1 Oct 2007 18:42 Spammers eye the Holy GrailJohn C. Dvorak talked about this in his column weeks ago.By Anonymous Coward
Posted Monday 1st October 2007 20:17 GMT
John C. Dvorak talked about this in his column weeks ago. http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,2188281,00.asp It must be your computerBy James
Posted Monday 1st October 2007 20:39 GMT
I have no "rogue sites" in my google results. your computers are probably infected with some sort of spyware that replaces the google search page with its own trash. hahah @james . . . .By steve lampros
Posted Monday 1st October 2007 23:11 GMT
yeah that must be it. if we can't see it then it must not be true. Maybe they fixed itBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Monday 1st October 2007 23:32 GMT
James - Maybe they read this article and fixed it. We already know that google manually modify search results don't we, one of my mates used to do this for a job. How odd...By Richard Kilpatrick
Posted Tuesday 2nd October 2007 00:57 GMT
I clicked the provided link, removed the ?, and watched as information about Toyota Supra nonsense appeared. No malware on my machine at all. How peculiar. I guess it must not work on OS X or, presumably, anything other than Windows ;) Something to do with a javascriptBy Alan Donaly
Posted Tuesday 2nd October 2007 01:38 GMT
and long word lists the owners use .name registration for the script and .cn to host the list and all the pages are alphabetic jjhg.html xzc.html.I have been trying to figure out what it does exactly for a couple of weeks it seems to be tied in to links from spam emails using the I'm feeling lucky url encoded query string to unblock known spamvertisers for that to work it has to be the number one search result it's not supposed to be possible to just dial in a number one search result is it.If it is I want to use it Google better beat me to it. Quick updateBy Matt Cutts
Posted Tuesday 2nd October 2007 05:35 GMT
Hi Dan, I left a quick update on my blog, but the short answer is that we've recently made some changes that should help address this issue. More info if you're interested is here: http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/still-chugging/#comment-113783 malwareBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Tuesday 2nd October 2007 08:15 GMT
do a search for something like LadsLads and toward the bottom of the results are such sites, which look like YouTube player but infact activex malware installers Impressive .....By A J Stiles
Posted Tuesday 2nd October 2007 09:24 GMT
When I visited the site linked from the Dvorak article, I got a page of nonsense words; I was then redirected to a site with a message to the effect of "Now scanning C:\WINDOWS\system32\32\drivers\..." Repeat visits redirected to various different sites. Later, it told me I was infected with Backdoor:Win32/NTRoot, Backdoor:Win32/Sivuxa. and Trojan:Caiijing. Considering that I'm running Debian on a pure 64-bit system (no 32-bit code *at all*), that is truly impressive! John C. Dvorak and crankygeeks.comBy Danny
Posted Tuesday 2nd October 2007 10:04 GMT
"John C. Dvorak talked about this in his column weeks ago. http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,2188281,00.asp" OT but, there's a link from the pcmag site to JCD's crankygeeks.com where he has a video magazine thingy. Watching the latest episode now (#83) and noticed there's some guy on the show called Drew Cullen from The Reg... Google improved, still a problem on Yahoo and live.comBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Tuesday 2nd October 2007 10:43 GMT
The following search terms: Bayesian networks decision graphs rapidshare Produces mostly pukka pages on Google now, but still returns a load of .cn sites on Yahoo and live.com @Anonymous VultureBy Simon Painter
Posted Tuesday 2nd October 2007 11:25 GMT
But then nobody cares what John C. Dvorak says anymore. Google *is already* SpammedBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Tuesday 2nd October 2007 11:25 GMT
The Google index is full of garbage; search for almost anything and you'll get a blizzard of results for referrers, pretend blogs and abandoned domains now pointing at even more referrers. Sure, no one has been able to directly manipulate the Google index but all you have to do is keep saturating the index in enough dud web sites and they'll start appearing. We all know Google is under persistent attack from the pond scum that inhabit the Internet and this just confirms it. How to prevent accidental clicks.By Anonymous Coward
Posted Tuesday 2nd October 2007 14:00 GMT
#1. Just don't make it a link. #2. If you insist on making it a clickable hyperlink, break it by munging the hostname part of the URL, not the URI path, because if it's not a real webserver but a malware-hosting-zombie, it's entirely likely that it completely ignores the path and just returns the same exploit for all URLs on the supposed website. What you've done here is the worst possible way of trying to protect your readers. I suggest you edit the article and de-linkify it ASAP. The period for commenting on this story has finished |
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