New York Times Site Pop-Up Says Your Computer Is Infected
Zott writes "Apparently, 'some readers' of the New York Times site are getting a bit more with their news: an apparently syndicated adware popup with a faux virus scan of the user's computer indicating they are infected, and a link to go download a fix now. It's entertaining when a Mac user gets it, but clearly downloading an .exe file isn't a good way to keep your computer clean ..." Update: 09/14 03:20 GMT by T : Troy encountered this malware, "and did basic forensics. Summary: iframe ad then series of HTML/JS redirects, ending at a fake virus scanner page with a "Scan" link (made to look like a dialog box button) that downloaded malware." Nice explanation!
But when it starts telling me the C:\ drive on my Linux box is infected it's hard to stop laughing.
Still was a job to get rid of the circle jerk pop ups.
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
And they wonder - Why is print media dying?
Because they can't adapt properly. Seriously guys, filter your ads!
but clearly downloading an .exe file isn't a good way to keep your computer clean ..."
Absolutely, .com, .bat and .scr are the only way to go!
... if we wanted to catch a virus from the New York Times, we had to read a copy that some hobo had used for a blanket.
Now you kids stay off my lawn!
Have gnu, will travel.
I've renamed my "Macintosh HD" to "C:" to accommodate the viruses, but they still won't run!