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Microsoft Files Suits Against "Malvertisers"

eldavojohn writes "Reuters is bringing us news of five civil lawsuits filed by Microsoft against 'Soft Solutions,' 'Direct Ad,' 'qiweroqw.com,' 'ITmeter Inc,' and 'ote2008.info' that allege they 'used malvertisements to distribute malicious software or present deceptive websites that peddled scareware to unsuspecting Internet users.' Microsoft's Tim Cranton outlined the suits and provided links to all the filings for download. 'Cranton added that names of specific individuals behind these activities were not known and the lawsuits were being filed to help uncover the people responsible.'"

7 of 205 comments (clear)

  1. This is a great idea! by tetsukaze · · Score: 5, Insightful

    These activties hurt Microsoft's reputation as well as being a huge burden to users of their products. Microsoft has the money and power to put the hurt on the bad guys. This is win win.

  2. Re:Brain... locking... up... by gnick · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't entirely understand the fight though. Is MS suing these folks for damage done only to their company directly? Or possibly for some kind of defamation by making Windows appear insecure? Or are they suing on behalf of everyone affected by these ass-hats? Like a class-action thing on behalf of everyone with a computer?

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  3. Re:Brain... locking... up... by rickb928 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you can't choose a side in this, you're being disingenuous. Just stop it, and for once make sense.

    Your only real complaint should be that the Department of Justice, multiple state Attorneys General, or motiviated citizens haven't already pursued these civil actions. And the DoJ etc. should be considering crminal actions, but are no doubt distracted by any number of safer, simpler, and easier to prosecute villains.

    There is simply no excuse for going after the worst of these weasels, and expanding the fight overseas when they flee to supposed safe havens. I wish Microsoft good hunting on this one. Let's get after them to patch XP's TCP stack also, but at least DO SOMETHING, someone, please?

    Me? I'm no good at suits.

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  4. Re:Brain... locking... up... by sopssa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You can blame "insecurity" of Windows all you want, but do you actually have an answer to how to make it better then? Before all the usual arguments come:

    - These malware work just aswell on user account, you do not need admin/root access.
    - Locking up the whole OS so that user is in 100% controlled environment is a no go, as seeing here on slashdot about iphone and other systems that do it.
    - Malware goes where the user is. If linux had ~95% marketshare on desktops, majority of malware would be there because thats where the users are.
    - Theres nothing on Linux that does anything to prevent this kind of malware - you only get more security because there's not many users. If you suggest everyone moving to it, what happens?
    - Conficker excluded, theres not really exploits in the Windows itself now a days. They're mostly from third party software like Flash and PDF reader.

    This isn't about OS security, its about user stupidity to install random crap. That wouldn't change even if the OS marketshare would be different.

  5. Re:Brain... locking... up... by sqrt(2) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The most secure OS in the world, not even Linux nor OSX, isn't going to be able to protect you when you decide to authorize and run an .exe file you downloaded.

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  6. Re:Brain... locking... up... by Khyber · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You know, I think you need more perspective on this.

    It's not the insecurity of Windows, it's the Insecurity of all these third party plugins (JAVASCRIPT, FLASH, I'M LOOKING AT YOU) that cause these problems to start with, plus DRM rootkits on music discs and movies that open up more holes in our system.

    New technology, new vulnerabilities and exploits. Flash and JavaScript are the two most commonly used points of infection.

    Really, the fault isn't entirely on Microsoft. Start blaming Adobe, Sun Systems, and the Music/Movie industry, as the biggest part of this lies squarely upon their shoulders.

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  7. Re:Brain... locking... up... by Kamokazi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually the Conficker hole was patched nearly a year ago. Microsoft has gotten their shit together with security so much recently that you can legitimately argue that it may be comparable to your average Linux distro...I'm not saying that is the case, I REALLY do not want to go down that path, my overall point is that 5 years ago, anyone who made the statement I just did would have been ridiculed as a moron, and rightly so.

    But you hit very good points...no matter how secure an OS is, it has to listen to its dumbfuck user. The only way to protect against stupid users is to limit rights to oblivion, but then you limit the usefulness of the system. In most cases, the OS cannot determine what is desired behavior of a program or not.

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