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Superfish Injects Ads In 1 In 25 Google Page Views

An anonymous reader writes: A new report from Google has found that more than 5% of unique daily IP addresses accessing Google — tens of millions — are interrupted by ad-injection techniques, and that Superfish, responsible for a major controversy with Lenovo in February is the leading adware behind what is clearly now an industry. Amongst the report's recommendations to address the problem is the suggestion that browser makers "harden their environments against side-loading extensions or modifying the browser environment without user consent." Some of the most popular extensions for Chrome and Firefox, including ad-blockers, depend on this functionality.

2 of 91 comments (clear)

  1. Or disable javascript by Spy+Handler · · Score: 4, Insightful

    whoever thought running scripts from random sites and ads was a good idea?

    1. Re:Or disable javascript by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      90% of sites now don't work at all without javascript. It makes for a very boring internet.