Pop Up Blocker Ad Sites.

  • Thread starter Thread starter Guest
  • Start date Start date
G

Guest

I look at my internet setting everyday since I installed Service Pack 2. I
continually find the sites Lop.com, Mysearch.com, Mysearch2.com, etc. on the
allowed ad sites. I erase them and they're back the next day. Anyone know
why?
 
Download Ad-Aware SE Personal Edition and scan your PC for the presence of spyware:
http://www.download.com/3000-2144-10045910.html?part=69274&subj=dlpage&tag=button

Symantec Security Check
http://security.symantec.com/sscv6/default.asp?langid=ie&venid=sym

Unexplained computer behavior may be caused by deceptive software
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=827315

Dealing with Unwanted Spyware and Parasites
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/unwanted.htm

--
Carey Frisch
Microsoft MVP
Windows XP - Shell/User

Be Smart! Protect Your PC!
http://www.microsoft.com/athome/security/protect/default.aspx

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

:

| I look at my internet setting everyday since I installed Service Pack 2. I
| continually find the sites Lop.com, Mysearch.com, Mysearch2.com, etc. on the
| allowed ad sites. I erase them and they're back the next day. Anyone know
| why?
| --
| The Doc Is In.
 
autodoc68 said:
I look at my internet setting everyday since I installed Service
Pack
2. I continually find the sites Lop.com, Mysearch.com,
Mysearch2.com, etc. on the allowed ad sites. I erase them and
they're back the next day. Anyone know why?

Because you, or someone else using your computer, have downloaded
and installed installed the necessary adware/spyware components that
allow these sites free rein. Mysearch.com, in particular, is a tool
of the Smiley Central scam.

To deal with issues caused by any sort of "adware" and/or
"spyware,"such as Gator, Comet Cursors, Smiley Central, Xupiter,
Bonzai Buddy, or KaZaA, and their remnants, that you've deliberately
(but without understanding the consequences) installed, two products
that are quite effective (at finding and removing this type of
scumware) are Ad-Aware from www.lavasoft.de and SpyBot Search &
Destroy from www.safer-networking.org/. Both have free versions.
It's even possible to use SpyBot Search & Destroy to "immunize" your
system against most future intrusions. I use both and generally
perform manual scans every week or so to clean out cookies, etc.

Additionally, manual removal instructions for the most common
varieties of scumware are available here:

PC Hell Spyware and Adware Removal Help
http://www.pchell.com/support/spyware.shtml


Neither adware nor spyware, collectively known as scumware,
magically install themselves on anyone's computer. They are almost
always deliberately installed by the computer's user, as part of some
allegedly "free" service or product.

While there are some unscrupulous malware distributors out there,
who do attempt to install and exploit malware without consent, the
majority of them simply rely upon the intellectual laziness and
gullibility of the average consumer, counting on them to quickly click
past the EULA in his/her haste to get the latest in "free" cutesy
cursors, screensavers, "utilities," and/or wallpapers.

If you were to read the EULAs that accompany, and to which the
computer user must agree before the download/installation of the
"screensaver" continues, most adware and spyware, you'll find that
they _do_ have the consumer's permission to do exactly what they're
doing. In the overwhelming majority of cases, computer users have no
one to blame but themselves.

There are several essential components to computer security: a
knowledgeable and pro-active user, a properly configured firewall,
reliable and up-to-date antivirus software, and the prompt repair (via
patches, hotfixes, or service packs) of any known vulnerabilities.

The weakest link in this "equation" is, of course, the computer
user. No software manufacturer can -- nor should they be expected
to -- protect the computer user from him/herself. All too many people
have bought into the various PC/software manufacturers marketing
claims of easy computing. They believe that their computer should be
no harder to use than a toaster oven; they have neither the
inclination or desire to learn how to safely use their computer. All
too few people keep their antivirus software current, install patches
in a timely manner, or stop to really think about that cutesy link
they're about to click.

Firewalls and anti-virus applications, which should always be used
and should always be running, are important components of "safe hex,"
but they cannot, and should not be expected to, protect the computer
user from him/herself. Ultimately, it is incumbent upon each and
every computer user to learn how to secure his/her own computer.


To learn more about practicing "safe hex," start with these links:

Protect Your PC
http://www.microsoft.com/security/protect/default.asp

Home Computer Security
http://www.cert.org/homeusers/HomeComputerSecurity/

List of Antivirus Software Vendors
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;49500

Home PC Firewall Guide
http://www.firewallguide.com/

Scumware.com
http://www.scumware.com/

--

Bruce Chambers

Help us help you:



You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don't ever count on
having
both at once. - RAH
 
If you've installed Messenger Plus, uninstall it then reinstall it
without the "sponsor program ".

MowGreen [MVP]
===============
*-343-* FDNY
Never Forgotten
===============
 
The Messenger Plus is the only one that I didn't think about. Probably
because I associate it with the security of messenger. Well I was wrong.
Thanks to those who replied, I have found the problem. Very knowledgeable
info. Chow.
 
I would have agreed with you completely until this past Sunday. I was
infected with some adware that installed itself just by my visiting a
website. Nothing I tried would remove it. I did it manually and had to go
back to a restore point from the day before infection. You did say "almost
never" so your bases are covered there. But it shouldn't be as easy and
automatic as it was in my case. I did a Google search, clicked one of the
links and bingo, pop-ups start appearing. Then I spent the next 8 hours
doing registry deletes and "Safe" mode boots until finally I got it cleaned
up. I have XP sp2 and run IE fairly well locked down, the one thing I had
enabled was Java, so that's where my suspicion lies. I've since started
putting websites in my "Restricted sites zone", where everything is turned
off. "Lets be careful out there!" The thing that annoys me the most is that
there are some very intelligent and skilled programmers out there who think
that writing that garbage is
worthy of their talent. I could get them a US $100,000/year job doing some
programming much more worthy of thier abilities. If they keep it up, I can
guarantee they will be starving in a year, if I get infected again by that
junk! I would happily start a SourceForge project with some other
world-class programmers to seal all of the holes in IE and give it to
Microsoft to give away.
 
Thanks so much....I never noticed .....

MowGreen said:
If you've installed Messenger Plus, uninstall it then reinstall it
without the "sponsor program ".

MowGreen [MVP]
===============
*-343-* FDNY
Never Forgotten
===============
 
Back
Top