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Spyware - Threat Research
What is Spyware?
‘Spyware’ is a
shorthand term for “unsolicited commercial
software” — that is, a program that
gets installed on your computer which you never
asked for, and which does something you probably
don’t want it to, for someone else’s
profit. Spyware often has the ability to broadcast
your PC's sensative information out over the web.
Things like passwords, key strokes, web histories,
credit card numbers and much more can be stolen
without you ever knowing. The Spyware problem has
grown enormously recently, and many millions of
computers are affected.
Want to know more
about a specific Spyware threat? Our
Spyware database offers detailed information
about many of the worst parasites on the Web.
Use the navigation above to search the Spyware
database according to the first letter of the
threat. Note: Threats that start with numbers
(example: 123Mania) can be found under the "other" tab.
If you are interested in learning
more about CoolWebSearch, then also visit the
CoolWebSearch
Chronicles.
What Else Can Spyware Do?
- Plague you with unwanted advertising (‘adware’)
- Add advertising links to web pages, for which
the author does not get paid, and redirect the
payments from affiliate-fee schemes to the makers
of the software (such software is sometimes called ‘scumware’)
- Set browser home page and search settings to
point to the makers’ sites (generally loaded
with advertising), and prevent you changing it
back (‘homepage hijackers’)
- Make your modem (analogue or ISDN) call premium-rate
phone numbers (‘diallers’)
- Leave security holes allowing the makers of
the software — or, in particularly bad
cases, anyone at all — to download and
run software on your machine
- Degrade system performance and cause errors
thanks to being badly-written
- Provide no uninstall feature, and put its code
in unexpected and hidden places to make it difficult
to remove.
Where Does Spyware
Come From?
There are three major ways
unsolicited commercial software can make its way
on to your machine:
-
Some freeware programs
are ‘bundled’ with parasites, which
are installed at the same time. The P2P file-sharing
programs are notorious for this; in particular,
iMesh and Grokster come with countless unwanted
add-ons.
Often if you are careful
to read the small print when you install the
software it will warn you about this, and it
is sometimes possible to opt out. So always
skim the licence agreement when you install
and don’t just click Next-Next-Next...
but you still can’t be sure they’ll
tell you.
-
Many parasites load using
Internet Explorer’s ActiveX installation
option. When a web page includes a link to
an ActiveX program, a window will appear asking
the user wishes to execute it. If ‘Yes’ is
clicked (or if IE security settings are set
lower than normal so that it never even asks*),
the software is allowed to run and can do anything
at all it likes on our computer, including
installing parasites.
For this reason, you should never click ‘Yes’ to
a “Do you wish to download and install...” prompt
unless you are 100% sure you trust the publisher
of the software, which might not be the publisher
of the web site you are viewed — read
the dialogue box very carefully.
Sometimes sites (or pop-up
ads) try to fool you into clicking ‘Yes’ by
stating that the software is necessary to view
the site, or opening endless error windows
if you click ‘No’, or claiming
that the digital certificate on the code means
it is safe. It means no such thing. ‘Microsoft
Authenticode’, signed by companies like
Verisign, means only that the company that
wrote the software is the same as the company
whose name appears on the download prompt — nothing
more.
-
Some of the really sleazy
parasites, particularly homepage-hijackers
and diallers, execute by exploiting security
holes in Internet Explorer, ways of getting
code to run that are not supposed to be possible,
but are due to mistakes in the browser code.
You can do your best to
guard against this by ensuring you have the
latest updates and patches from Microsoft.
Still, there are usually a handful of security
holes that have not yet been corrected, so
you can never be 100% sure you are safe.
One way of reducing your
risk of exploitation is to go to Tools->Internet
Options->Security and set the security level
for the Internet Zone to ‘High’.
(If no slider is visible, click ‘Default
level to make it appear first.) Then set the
security level for the Trusted Zone to ‘Medium’ and
add the sites you use and trust to this zone;
you may need to do this quite often as many
badly-designed sites just won’t work
in high-security mode.
An alternative solution for
the last two problems is just to use a different
web browser for everyday browsing, and Internet
Explorer only for sites you trust that stubbornly
refuse to work with other browsers.
Why Doesn't My Anti-Virus
Software Detect Spyware?
Technically, most unsolicited
commercial software isn’t viral: it doesn’t
spread from computer to computer, it just installs
and runs on one system.
That doesn’t mean it’s
not harmful, but anti-virus software does not attempt
to detect all software that could be harmful. Whether
it should is a tricky argument that ends
up a question of where you draw the line.
Actually some anti-virus programs
do detect some of the parasites outlined
on these pages, but not nearly all, and not all
versions of them. Parasites that install using
IE security holes are more likely to be targeted
by the anti-virus software vendors, but the selection
of targets seems for the most part to be pretty
arbitrary.
What is my Best Defense
Against Spyware?
Your best defense against
Spyware is SpySubtract PRO.
» Download a free
trial today. |