By Colin WilsonPosted Saturday 12th January 2008 01:28 GMT
Switch off all the tellytubby eyecandy XP throws at you, and go back to classic mode - your machine will be more responsive, and won't look like it was another botched Mrs "Bob" Gates project...
Sure, this cunning plan will fail if enough people do it to make it obvious, but as a starter for ten...
Paris icon used because she probably likes tellytubbies.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Saturday 12th January 2008 03:00 GMT
Two things: First, please explain how simply switching schemes in XP will protect you from anything except perhaps mild nausea. Second, I believe it's "Teletubby", not "Tellytubby", unless of course this particular horror wears different nomenclature in the UK.
By Vaughan Trevor JonesPosted Saturday 12th January 2008 07:01 GMT
Gotta say who ever came up with that one, has some skill. Throw away the keys!
*Off topic rant*; why is it that most people can not stay on topics with these comments. I mean seriously don't the admins read this stuff. So then do not complain when an article does not have an IT angle, cause when it does your comments are off topic.
By Test ManPosted Saturday 12th January 2008 21:53 GMT
Do you think changing the theme is going to stop n00b users from downloading the malware anyway? Think about it, if you're intelligent enough to work out that the window is appearing in a theme that isn't the current Windows theme, then you'd be intelligent enough to know it's a fake window ANYWAY (without having to change the theme). Therefore, that "advice" is really useless.
Hey, I resent that. I'm hardly a newbie, yet the first time a popup along these lines appeared on my archaic Win98 machine running Netscape 7.2, I had to stop and think before figuring out what was going on.
It was the use of what I suppose was an XP theme that was the clue, but even me with my marvelous brain had to pay attention. Cut the real doofuses and noobs some slack, okay?
[IIRC, it was one of those "your computer is infested with malware, quick, download our malware so you have a complete set to tell your grandchildren about" scams a few years ago.]
By David WiernickiPosted Sunday 13th January 2008 04:42 GMT
It seems to me that autoblocking any downloads from servers hosted in Russia or the far east is a good way to go. Likewise, my spam detection would go from 90% kill rate to near 100% if IP ranges of links were checked - all but a tiny minority point to sites hosted in China or Russia.
Obviously if you tend to receive email with links to sites hosted in, or download stuff from, China/Russia all the time it won't work, but the majority of n00b users won't, and I certainly don't. If you wanted to be more specific, spamblocking / download blocking to IPs from known bulletproof ISPs would be useful - has anybody ever seen a legitimate link to something hosted on Chinanet? :P
By Robert E A HarveyPosted Sunday 13th January 2008 13:20 GMT
I had a similar pop-up whilst searching a more specialist site for photographs of east german railway locomotives.
Since it claimed to have scanned my copy of windows I was immediately suspicious - I was running slackware at the time - and reported it to the site owners who told me later that day that their server had been hacked and would be off for several days while they sorted it out.
By Steven SwensonPosted Monday 14th January 2008 04:50 GMT
At first I wondered how on earth they made it do that, since myspace filters out any attempts to place javascript on their pages. Then I realized that it's just a simple image with some CSS to place it. How do they catch you clicking near it? The image file itself is bigger than the depicted window with a transparent filling.
Seriously though, something like that would never fool me. Seeing my mouse pointer change before I even got to the button would alert me. Even if I didn't use Ubuntu now.
By TeeCeePosted Monday 14th January 2008 11:40 GMT
Good point. We're through anorak territory there and heading into the 1970's vintage blue nylon snorkel parka a size too large with orange lining enclave.
Comments on: Poisoned MySpace page masquerades as Windows Update
Obvious solution to "image" scams ? #
By Colin Wilson Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 01:28 GMT
@Colin Wilson #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 03:00 GMT
@ Anonymous Coward #
By James Condron Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 04:16 GMT
Nubile? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 05:24 GMT
Stick to topic #
By Vaughan Trevor Jones Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 07:01 GMT
So old it has whiskers #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 08:33 GMT
Rita. Hot or Not?? #
By Ian Emery Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 11:15 GMT
lack of essential security i suppose #
By Simon Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 13:55 GMT
So where is... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 15:49 GMT
Hang on a mo... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 21:20 GMT
Re:Colin Wilson #
By Test Man Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 21:53 GMT
A link would be appreciated #
By davebarnes Posted Saturday 12th January 2008 23:51 GMT
@ Test Man #
By RW Posted Sunday 13th January 2008 01:59 GMT
Obvious? #
By David Wiernicki Posted Sunday 13th January 2008 04:42 GMT
Dead give away #
By Robert E A Harvey Posted Sunday 13th January 2008 13:20 GMT
Solution #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Sunday 13th January 2008 17:58 GMT
Easy trick #
By Steven Swenson Posted Monday 14th January 2008 04:50 GMT
Re: Dead give away #
By William Wallace Posted Monday 14th January 2008 07:34 GMT
Eeeeeeevillllllll!!!!! #
By Chris Hamilton Posted Monday 14th January 2008 08:15 GMT
re: "Bebo is much better." #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 14th January 2008 10:24 GMT
re: "Bebo is much better." #
By Slaine Posted Monday 14th January 2008 10:40 GMT
"Bebo is much better" #
By Anraí MacCoilín Posted Monday 14th January 2008 11:18 GMT
@William Wallace. #
By TeeCee Posted Monday 14th January 2008 11:40 GMT
Don't know if it's connected,but, #
By Anonymous John Posted Monday 14th January 2008 18:26 GMT
@ David Wiernicki #
By Morely Dotes Posted Monday 14th January 2008 19:39 GMT
That's why I don't connect to internet... #
By Jorge Olguin Avalos Posted Monday 14th January 2008 20:41 GMT