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Adware
Installation Stealth Tactics |
by:
Joel
Walsh |
When
adware can't trick you into installing it,
it often resorts to a secretive invasion.
Find out how to defend yourself.
Adware Installation Stealth Tactic 1: Expensive
Freebie
. How it works: adware may get installed
with so-called free software without any
mention of it being included anywhere in
the software's license or documentation.
Or any mention of the bundled software is
buried deep within a click-wrap licensing
agreement.
. How to protect yourself: It's become an
endlessly repeated cliché, but it's true:
only install software from developers you
trust. That doesn't mean you can never try
any software from a new company. Just familiarize
yourself with the developer's reputation
before opening wide your hard drive. Search
the developer's name on search engines.
If a dozen anti-spyware advertisements are
listed alongside the search results, that's
not a good sign.
. How to fight back: If you've already downloaded
the expensive freebie, it's probably too
late to simply uninstall it. The bundled
adware will likely stick around on your
computer long after the software that came
with it has been sent to the recycling bin.
Instead, you need to use an anti-spyware
program, and preferably two to be sure.
Tactic 2. Adware Drive-by
. How it works: adware may hide in a website's
code and download itself automatically onto
the site visitor's hard drive. This is often
called a "drive-by" installation.
. How to protect yourself: drive-by installations
of software tend to happen on obscure commercial
websites, rather than personal homepages,
blogs, or the websites of established businesses.
If you can avoid surfing in those kinds
of rough waters, you'll be a lot safer from
adware attacks.
. How to fight back: If you do suspect that
a site has downloaded software onto your
computer, close it immediately and fire
up your anti-spyware and antivirus software.
You may also want to delete your browser's
cache and also any program downloads folders
and temporary internet folders, just in
case the adware is a new kind of adware
that isn't in your anti-spyware software's
database yet.
Tactic 3: The Old-Fashioned Way: Email
. How it works: you know the drill: just
as with viruses, adware may come as an email
attachment. The stealth part is that simply
not opening attachments may not be enough
to protect you. The attachment may not display
an attachment icon and is set to auto-install
as soon as the message is opened.
. How to protect yourself: make sure your
email software does not open attached files
automatically. With most new email software
applications the option to block automatic
downloads of attached files is set as the
default. But to be really safe, you should
set your anti-spyware software to automatically
monitor all email.
. How to fight back: delete the offending
email without opening it or the attachment
(assuming that hasn't happened already).
Run a full scan of your hard drive using
anti-spyware and antivirus software.
About the author:
Joel Walsh writes for spyware-refuge about
spyware and adware removal: http://www.spyware-refuge.com?spyware
adware remover [Publish this article on
your website! Requirement: live link for
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Circulated by Bandoni
Media
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