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Unwanted Popups Boosting Web Traffic

Most of us have experienced popups used for advertising. Now, some adware companies and advertiser networks are using popups (mostly from programs that users did not want installed) to directly boost traffic numbers for their customer Web sites. Net rating and measurement companies try to detect and discount such inflated traffic numbers, with mixed success.

4 of 118 comments (clear)

  1. Re:RTFS by djh101010 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...meaning spyware, adware, viruses, trojans etc. It has nothing to do with your choice of browser.

    I disagree. On my work system (the only windows box I use), with IE, I get lots of popups, with firefox, I get very very few. So it certainly has _something_ to do with my choice of browser. It's all additive, of course: use a browser that has some decent popup blocking, _and_ don't install stupid shit on your pc, _or_ don't run the OS the stupid shit is made for. It all helps.

  2. Why display these adds at all? by Buttonius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wouldn't it be much smarter if these adware companies let their malware fetch the popup file (pretending to be any popular web browser) and not display it to the user? Most users would never notice the additional network traffic and, not having seen a sudden popup, would have little incentive to go hunting for the spyware.

  3. Re:Use an OS that has a lot less of these problems by Phisbut · · Score: 5, Insightful
    because as a Linux user, even as a totally novice user, you can get all of your software from direct from whoever provided the distribution you are using, and it becomes less likely that you would want to install some random screen saver or other application that you find on the web.

    If Jane Sixpack wants those bouncy smileys for her email, and the "official distribution channel" doesn't provide them, she will download them from a random website and install them, and if installing them requires the root password, then the root password it will get.

    The typical Windows user knows not to open random email attachments and not to execute software downloaded from random websites, but the "need" for smileys and other flashy-flashies trumps any security education.

    The problem is not the OS, it's the user. And I'd rather those users keep away from Linux.

    --
    After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
    - The Tao of Programming
  4. Re:Unwanted what-now? NoScript and AdBlock by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I personally find both NoScript and AdBlock work well in Firefox. Now, I'm not against ads, but if they persist in being NOISY, MOVING, obnoxious ads I don't just kill them, I kill the entire subsite that launces them.

    Want ads? Then stop popping up and stop full motion video with sound.

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