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Intentional SpyWare Infection?

zagman asks: "I am doing some research on SpyWare / AdWare, and how to prevent/contain the problem, and am looking for some of those 'Bad Sites' - you know, the ones which take advantage of any of the known exploits and installs a whole bunch of software without your knowledge (or sometime with it). I am testing this on IE6 on an XP-SP1 box (no further patches) and also IE6.02 on a XP-SP2 box. Can anyone out there recommend some 'good' bad-sites for me to go? Benjamin Edelman did some similar work, and posted his results, but I also want to compare Mozilla and FireFox's response as well. Thanks out there!" Update: 11/24 4:05pm EDT by C : In case it hasn't been mentioned already, a considerable amount of infection can be obtained from a single website. Any other infectious goodies out there?

2 of 33 comments (clear)

  1. lop.com by the_maddman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    try out lop.com and see if you can clean that crap off.

  2. Re:Another IE trash fest. by Examancer2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    guess you couldn't be bothered to even read a whole paragraph. Look closely as the poster clearly indicates he wants to find sites that infect systems with Spyware and see how Firefox and Mozilla respond to the same sites, to see if they are as impervious as many claim. Also, at the beginning of the paragraph he says that he is doing this to find better ways to prevent and contain the problems with spyware/adware/malware, not to bash IE. Personally, I've already come across some Firefox/Mozilla SPECIFIC spyware/trojans using Firefox/Mozilla's automatic XPI extension installation. If I were an average joe user, these could very well dupe me into clicking through and ruining the privacy, security, and integrity of my system... assuming I could even still use the system afterwards. I look forward to the findings of this poster, and the findings of similar articles. Security through obscurity is comming to an end for Firefox and Mozilla, so these are important issues.