Google Expands Safe Browsing To Block Unwanted Downloads
An anonymous reader writes "Google today announced it is expanding its Safe Browsing service to protect users against malware that makes unexpected changes to your computer. Google says it will show a warning in Chrome whenever an attempt is made to trick you into downloading and installing such software. In the case of malware, PUA stands for Potentially Unwanted Application, which is also sometimes called Potentially Unwanted Program or PUP. In short, the broad terms encompass any downloads that the user does not want, typically because they display popups, show ads, install toolbars in the default browser, change the homepage or the search engine, run several processes in the background that slow down the PC, and so on."
The important question is whether they'll have the balls to block Google Toolbar.
Find the Java Control Panel, go to advanced options, and near the bottom in miscellaneous, you can tell java not to bug you with crap ware when it updates.
Google says it will show a warning in Chrome whenever an attempt is made to trick you into downloading and installing such software.
That's ... hilarious? I've always considered Chrome to be PUP or PUA considering how it always seemed to be downloaded with something else. I've had to remove Chrome from so many systems where someone has updated some other program and Chrome came along for the ride, sometimes even when I've installed other things and didn't pay extremely close attention. Now Chrome is going to rat out other programs that do the same thing!
I'm looking at you, CNET... you used to be cool.
Pretty much any site requiring a "file downloader" is simply evil and should be expunged by or at least blacklisted by browsers. That would help fight 80% of the delivery of malware that I've seen infecting friend's and family's computers.
Would they also block downloads with Chrome bundled? That spyware is definitely unwanted on my system.
The real test is if they block stuff that installs Google Toolbar. If they don't then this is all just bullshit.
On Windows, from an enterprise perspective, that's not the way to do it.
Java has moved to a set of files that go in %systemroot%\sun\java\deployment that now manages those settings.