Finally some spyware spawners getting heat! | FerrariChat

Finally some spyware spawners getting heat!

Discussion in 'Other Off Topic Forum' started by rob lay, Oct 5, 2005.

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, Skimlinks, and others.

  1. rob lay

    rob lay Administrator
    Staff Member Admin Miami 2018 Owner Social Subscribed

    Dec 1, 2000
    63,968
    Southlake, TX
    Full Name:
    Rob Lay
    Back in March my computer was taken over by spyware and it was basically shut down for more than a day. I had only tried to download a portion of an old music video, but what I approved was a full on attack and I never even got the video!

    http://www.ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=49783

    Through the help of users I was able to slowly clear off my computer where it functioned, but there were over 50 rogue programs that had already installed! Since then I've only used Firefox and haven't had a single problem. If your computer runs slower than it once did and you're getting a bunch of pop-ups, then chances are you have been attacked too.

    The deception of these companies and the negative effects it has should lead to tougher penalties than I think it will. These spammers and spyware companies should be locked up for decades!

    Government Cracks Down on Spyware Operation

    Oct 5, 3:30 PM (ET)

    By JENNIFER C. KERR

    WASHINGTON (AP) - Government regulators are trying to shut down a company they say secretly downloaded spyware onto the computers of unwitting Internet users, rendering them helpless to a flood of pop-up ads, computer crashes and other annoyances.

    The Federal Trade Commission accused Walter Rines of Stratham, N.H., and his company, Odysseus Marketing, of luring computer users with the promise of free software that would make peer-to-peer file sharing anonymous. The claim was bogus, the agency said, and the software was bundled with spyware that was secretly downloaded onto computers.

    Spyware has been a growing problem, with calls in Congress for legislation and an increase in enforcement by federal regulators.

    Spyware describes a broad category of software that can be installed through unsafe e-mails or Web pages, or can be bundled with software that consumers download to their computers.

    Rines said he has done nothing wrong and that users were fully aware of what they were downloading.

    "There was nothing secretly installed anywhere," he said. "In fact, the users had to click a box that said they read the end-user license agreement."

    The FTC said the disclosure about spyware was buried on his Web site.

    Odysseus allegedly used a spyware program called Clientman that spawned downloads of dozens of other programs - slowing computers down, bombarding them with pop-up ads and redirecting them to fake search engines that were rigged to show Rines' clients first, according to the FTC complaint.

    The agency also said the spyware was nearly impossible to remove. Rines, the FTC said, offered his own "uninstall" tool, but it didn't work and actually installed additional software.

    The commission accused Rines and his company of unfair and deceptive practices that violate federal law. It asked a federal judge in New Hampshire for a temporary restraining order, but planned to seek a permanent halt to Rines' operation.

    The lawsuit is an encouraging step because it can be difficult to track down the distributors of spyware, said Ari Schwartz, associate director at the Center for Democracy and Technology, a privacy-advocacy group that researches and investigates spyware.

    "It's a big deal," he said. "It shows the FTC can work its way backward down the chain."

    The FTC filed its first federal anti-spyware case last fall against Sanford Wallace, a New Hampshire man known as the "Spam King." It accused him of using spyware programs to infect computers and then selling $30 remedies that the agency said didn't work.

    Wallace and Rines were partners at one time, the commission said.
     
  2. wax

    wax Five Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa

    Jul 20, 2003
    52,414
    SFPD
    Full Name:
    Dirty Harry
    Let him be fully aware of what he's "downloading" in prison then. Consider it a special guzzler tax.
     
  3. writerguy

    writerguy F1 Veteran

    Sep 30, 2003
    6,786
    NewRotic
    Full Name:
    Otto

    Na DOWNLOADING via an INTERFACE
     
  4. BigAl

    BigAl F1 Veteran

    Mar 17, 2002
    6,146
    TX
    Full Name:
    GSgt Hartman
    oh but they're all quick to claim they're not spyware, they're adware (yeah, right). If you believe them they're arean't ANY spyware vendors. Remember when Gator was pissin' and moanin' about not producing spyware?
     

Share This Page